The buttons on Zenith’s original ‘clicker’ remote were a mechanical marvel
The buttons on Zenith’s original ‘clicker’ remote were a mechanical marvel
The Space Command fixed problems we still live with today.
Give me a Technology Connections (@TechConnectify@mas.to) video on it
46 0 ReplyThat was literally my first thought when I saw the article.
11 0 ReplyGod, I love that man
13 0 Reply
Oh, I so want that!
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I like the sounds of the tines! It's basically just a tuning fork, so wild.
12 0 ReplyI’m old and still call the remote “the clicker”. My 7 year old wondered what the heck a clicker is.
Cue old dad “back in my day, the remotes actually clicked” story.
2 0 Reply@reverendz @dingus, when I was young, I was the remote
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Our first tv with a remote control that wasn't me or my sibling using small vise grip on channel knob had a telephone included in the tv.
Like this was in 1982 so not a modem ... just a tv with a land line phone built in that you have to use the remote to make or receive a call.
7 0 ReplyYes! Those channel knobs were so easily broken. I thought we were the only ones turning channels with pair of vice-grips clamped on the nub.
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I had a Heathkit TV that used a variation of this design! If you held it really close to your ear then you could actually hear it emitting.
6 0 ReplyThis was mentioned a couple of weeks ago on the Vergecast. I was wondering if someone was going to get assigned the article, and here it is!
6 0 ReplyThat's fancy. Our clicker only had two buttons for channel changing.
4 0 ReplyNever seen or heard from anyone using tape to mask their remotes. Is this really a thing?
3 0 ReplyNever seen or heard from anyone using tape to mask their remotes. Is this really a thing?
Not this exactly, but my grandparents had a guide taped to the backside of their remotes to make it easier to use.
The tape strategy has some appeal, though, mainly in that I use maybe 5 buttons 95% of the time.
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Those don't take batteries and your click generates the electricity for the signal. Right? Like a wind up radio.
6 4 ReplyNo, it's a tuning fork that produces 4 seperate tones, one for each "button." The TV had a microphone listening for tones and would respond accordingly. You didn't actually have to point the remote at the TV, which later became a problem, as the mic on the TV was technically always listening for a tone.
24 0 ReplyNeat. I knew I could Cunningham Law this instead of doing research.
11 1 Reply
Nope! It's the sound that does the work. The TV has a microphone in it.
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What I loved about these remotes is you could take out a set of car keys and shake them and watch the channel changer go berserk.
1 0 Reply@igalmarino In my childhood our remote worked by emitting electronically generated ultrasonic sounds. It looked like that one: kleinanzeigen.de/s-anzeige/tel…
1 1 Reply