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Drop the home-phone line?

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    #31
    My first memories of our home phone number was BR and some numbers, 749-something. When I was about 9 or 10 that old rotary dial phone was replaced by the model 500 dial phone, and our number became seven digits, which I no longer remember.

    When my family and I moved out into the country near Clarks I purchased a Princes Phone from AT&T to replace the old model 500 that was in the house. After 10 years teaching high school in that village I informed AT&T to cancel our phone service because we were moving. I was told to bring the Princes Phone in. I total them I had purchased it. The AT&T person said to check the back of the "sales" slip -- it said "lease". She then said that a $5 monthly fee on my phone bill, which was marked "equipment", was the monthly lease fee, though it didn't use the word "lease" in that line. Sure enough, on the back of the light yellow sales slip was exceptional small writing, in very light gray letters covering the entire back, in legaleese, was the word "lease". It took a magnifying glass to read it. I was steamed. I had paid $75 for that phone which, in the early 70's was a signicant amount, but over the subsequent years the cost of that phone was actually closer to $400. I took that phone totally apart, undid every screw, unsoldered every wire, disassembled every button and componant, and reduced it to its basic components. I dumped them all into a shoe box and took it to AT&T office. "Here's your phone, each and every piece. The "sales" contract didn't say what condition the phone had to be in."
    Last edited by GreyGeek; Jan 12, 2015, 05:59 PM.
    "A nation that is afraid to let its people judge the truth and falsehood in an open market is a nation that is afraid of its people.”
    – John F. Kennedy, February 26, 1962.

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      #32
      First memory of home phones, grade school, northern Illinois small Midwest town. One crush I had was on the girl across the street, a classmate. Her number included two or three digits at the "end of the dial." It was impossible to dial her number fast enough sometimes (like when she hung up on me and I was trying to call back) as I had to dial through those long numbers. Interestingly, I remembered that number for 55 years, up until about 4 years ago, and now it is a blank. And, I recall my parents greatly (like really greatly) limiting how much time I could use the phone every evening ...
      An intellectual says a simple thing in a hard way. An artist says a hard thing in a simple way. Charles Bukowski

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        #33
        Originally posted by GreyGeek View Post
        I took that phone totally apart, undid every screw, unsoldered every wire, disassembled every button and componant, and reduced it to its basic components. I dumped them all into a shoe box and took it to AT&T office. "Here's your phone, each and every piece. The "sales" contract didn't say what condition the phone had to be in."
        I love that story!

        Please Read Me

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          #34
          Originally posted by oshunluvr View Post
          I would be surprised if an earthquake in Cali would knock out the internet lines but not phone lines.
          In the Christchurch, N.Z. earthquake everything in the ground and on poles went (in the badly affected neighborhoods) . Some cell stations stayed up but were immediately overwhelmed by traffic, and were running on battery power which lasted only hours.

          Regards, John Little
          Regards, John Little

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