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Matt (It's really me) Hartley@matthartley@fosstodon.org
1d

Audible sounds to change channels. It's a form of brilliant engineering I've always wondered about.

Between this and Captain Crunch whistles for long distance access tones, classic technology ALWAYS wowed me.

The long distance 2600 Hz trick stopped working in the 80s. The height of popularity was in the late 60s early 70s I believe.

A vintage black-and-white advertisement for Zenith Space Command TV featuring comedian George Burns. He is shown with an exaggerated, surprised expression, holding a thick, rectangular four-button remote control labeled "Zenith Space Command." Large text next to him reads, "'LOOK OUT, GRACIE! WITH ZENITH SPACE COMMAND TV I CAN CHANGE PROGRAMS FROM ACROSS THE ROOM'..." In the upper right corner, a television set displays his comedy partner, Gracie Allen, with text above her reading, "George!... You wouldn't dare!" The ad's side copy promotes the remote's "silent sound" technology, emphasizing that it can "shut off the sound of long, annoying commercials" and operates with "No Wires, No Batteries, No Transistors... NOTHING BETWEEN YOU AND THE SET BUT SPACE!" The bottom prominently features the Zenith logo alongside the tagline, "The Royalty of Television."
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Fishd@Fishd@infosec.exchange
1d

Replying to an earlier post

@matthartley Phone phreaking was active through the 80s and 90s with sound cards producing the tones needed to break operator control ... no cereal required .... so I'm told. 😳

Jul 4, 2026, 16:59 UTCen
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Matt (It's really me) Hartley@matthartley@fosstodon.org
1d

Replying to @matthartley@fosstodon.org

@Fishd ohh yeah, sound cards would have been awesome for this!

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Matt (It's really me) Hartley@matthartley@fosstodon.org
1d

Replying to an earlier post

@Fishd True. Used to do something in the 80s with payphones.

If memory serves me, 971, last four numbers, hang it up multiple times (3?) then it started ringing. Presumably a ringer check. 😁

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Fishd@Fishd@infosec.exchange
1d

Replying to an earlier post

@matthartley My IT origin story involves a leaked copy of the original Wolfenstein 3D, a friend with an Amiga, two modems and a loop line in NYC.

He used to try to get me to laugh during the setup ... as I'd get a US operator saying things like "Hello, I have a collect call from Austin Maestro... will you accept?" which is a bit like saying you had a collect call from AMC Pacer ...

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