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jblucio3177 subscribed to hauntnut
(17 hours ago)
She's getting on in years, but her judgment is still as juvenile as her excuses.
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Dancers : Lillie-Joe & Will Song : Steal Star ~Kirari~ by Steal Gals featuring Kyon (ZIPANG CREATE) Choreo : FARM Date : Nov 2011
。。。 ラブ・パラパラ 3から歌。 フ...
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Dancers : Lillie-Joe & Will Song : Steal Star ~Kirari~ by Steal Gals featuring Kyon (ZIPANG CREATE) Choreo : FARM Date : Nov 2011
。。。 ラブ・パラパラ 3から歌。 ファームレコードユーロビートが素晴らしいです。 懐かし~
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jblucio3177 liked a video
(1 day ago)

To see more from the AT&T Archives, visit http://techhchannel.att.com/archives
The story of how the Bell System, in cooperation with NASA, developed...
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To see more from the AT&T Archives, visit http://techhchannel.att.com/archives
The story of how the Bell System, in cooperation with NASA, developed the Telstar satellite, and participated in the launch and the subsequent successful transmission of signals to and from the earth and space. The film is from 1962.
Early scenes show the clearing of a site in Andover, Maine and the construction of Telstar there. Following this, the telephone scientists and engineers do research and test work on Telstar. The teamwork of business, industry and government is then shown at Cape Canaveral, where we see the final tests of the satellite, the seating of the rocket on the launch pad, mounting of the satellite on the final stage of the rocket and the launching of the satellite.
The film closes with scenes from Washington DC and Andover, including the first telephone call and faxed photo via satellite, and initial TV transmissions, including a live transmission of Yves Montand from France, greetings from the British, and a speech by JFK. By the end of June 1962, viewers in 16 countries could watch U.S. TV programs.
Telstar 1, the satellite profiled here, actually was quite tiny. It was only 34 inches across, and weighed 171 pounds. Its solar panels produced under 15 watts. Conversely, modern satellites average around 47 ft. wide and produce 1.5 kilowatts with their solar panels.
Telstar 1 had some problems in the next year after launch. Because the U.S. had conducted a nuclear test in space the day before Telstar was launched, Telstar was regularly exposed to more radiation than expected. Within six months of launch, the satellite worked no more and a restart only kept it functional until February 1963. Telstar is still up there in space as of 2011, though, surrounded by thousands of its dead satellite brethren.
Producer: Audio Productions, Inc.
Footage courtesy of AT&T Archives and History Center, Warren, NJ
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jblucio3177 liked a video
(1 day ago)

To see more from the AT&T Archives, visit http://techchannel.att.com/archives
This film centers around the "House of Ideas", which was pro...
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To see more from the AT&T Archives, visit http://techchannel.att.com/archives
This film centers around the "House of Ideas", which was profiled in the April, 1968 issue of Woman's Day magazine. Through the eyes of a young couple looking for a house, we meet the builder (and his kind of scary teeth), watch telephone cable for the house being laid underground, and then return to tour the finished home at an Open House.
The couple and their kids tour the house, decorated in high '60s style - yellows and browns. We briefly meet the editor of Woman's Day (in the kitchen, of course), see all the modern conveniences, and, of course, new telephones. This film originally had two versions made - it was on the cusp of people moving to pushbutton phones, or touch-tone phones, which were originally introduced at the 1962 World's Fair. Yet a lot of people still preferred the rotary dial, so there was a version of this film for each - this one is with rotary dial phones.
In the 1980s, the rotary dial phone was phased out, but "dialing" remains part of our language to refer to making a call. In 1994, NYC re-introduced rotary dial pay phones in a few problem areas to make it more difficult for users to conduct illicit activities at the time, since a pager could not be called from a rotary dial phone.
Footage courtesy of AT&T Archives and History Center, Warren, NJ
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jblucio3177 liked a video
(2 days ago)

See more from the AT&T Archives at http://techchannel.att.com/archives
The goal of this film was to aid in reducing customer dialing irregularities ...
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See more from the AT&T Archives at http://techchannel.att.com/archives
The goal of this film was to aid in reducing customer dialing irregularities by demonstrating the correct way to use the dial telephone. It documents the shift between operator-based connections (which were on the way out) and having to dial the phone and make the connection yourself.
The dial telephone was new at this point, although the two-letter, 5-number system was still commonplace. This film even has to explain what a ringing and busy signal sound like!
This film opens with the demonstrator pointing out the importance of correctly using the dial telephone. Correct dialing techniques are demonstrated, with an emphasis placed on the following:
1. Be sure of the right number 2. Wait for the dial tone 3. Refer to the number while dialing 4. Turn the dial until the finger hits the finger stop 5. Avoid confusing the letter "O" with the "0" 6. The difference between ringing and busy signals
One by one, the conventions described in this film that aren't already gone may disappear imminently - for instance: with voicemail the norm, when is the last time you got a busy signal on a call?
Susann Shaw, the demonstrator in this film, was a popular fashion model throughout the 1940s and 1950s, making frequent appearances in the pages of Vogue.
Produced by Charles E. Skinner Productions
Footage courtesy of AT&T Archives and History Center, Warren, NJ
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pls sub to our main channel (vid on autoplay thanks=D
video games havent messed up my mind im a stable person i just belive in darwinism the strong survive war is the most basic human instinct and our best tradition yes people die its bad but its the only way real problems can be resolved
i do apologize for my insults i poke fun at liberals but not mean it
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