Obscure / Rare Technology you used.

Burns

Avatar of War Slayer
7,427
14,638
he didn't cost anyone any money beyond what they spent to get to him. You really think a con artist would have trouble coming back from being debunked in a foreign country? The was in the infancy of the internet, it's not like he had a utube channel where all the followers of the conmen could watch their leader fail on livestream. I can't cite any sources specifically. It all came from the fact that I used to follow the jref like 20-30 years ago. I used to be entertained by it but I saw his underhanded dealings too often. I believe the child fucking came from a police report where he ordered a boy up to his room in the phillipines or something. I'm not going to go looking for it again. In fairness, IIRC there was only one report that came out and it could have been a setup. But also in fairness, he had enough stroke that he could have covered up other incidents.
When you are out there showing the public how the scams that people like John Edward, Syvia Brown, and Peter Popov work, it makes for a less gullible public for lesser know fraudsters to take advantage of. The more publicity Randi got, the more people would feel that he is jeopardizing their livelihood (of running scams). Not to mention the people he would call out in print or on TV.

That's not even taking into account that a subset of the true believers in these frauds would be willing to do harm to anyone challenging their deeply held beliefs.
 

Hoss

Make America's Team Great Again
<Gold Donor>
27,010
14,948
That's not even taking into account that a subset of the true believers in these frauds would be willing to do harm to anyone challenging their deeply held beliefs.
Fair enough. It was a long time ago. But this reminded me of something else I didn't like about him. There were too many JREF true believers. If I talked this kinda shit about him on a message board 20 years ago, there would already be a legion of them here trying to destroy me.
 

BrutulTM

Good, bad, I'm the guy with the gun.
<Silver Donator>
14,656
2,511
Anyone else remember the days on USENET when someone would make a negative post about Scientology and the newsgroup would become unreadable for 2 weeks due to people spamming gibberish to it?
 
  • 1Worf
Reactions: 1 user

imready2go

WTF is a Raider?
<Gold Donor>
1,251
5,525
We were the only people in the neighborhood with a Pong system. LOL
111aba4356b6bb5ce52ee29abbe5dac1--circa-atari.jpg
 
  • 7Like
Reactions: 6 users

Fidlen

Lord Nagafen Raider
195
586
Not exactly rare since they sold millions but probably obscure by now: Nintendo Game & Watch. Early 80s predecessor to the Gameboy.

Segmented LCD display so each only supported a single game and the mobs move by one segment extinguishing and the next lighting up.

View attachment 502828


View attachment 502827
My brother in law went through some midlife crisis and bought up every retro system he could find. This is just a small sample of what he picked up.

IMG_20171021_144542_417.jpg
IMG_20171021_144542_416.jpg
 
  • 4Like
  • 2WTF
  • 1Wow!
Reactions: 7 users

BrutulTM

Good, bad, I'm the guy with the gun.
<Silver Donator>
14,656
2,511
Did anyone else buy stuff from the "Gifts and Gimmicks" section in the back of Boy's Life Magazine? It was by far my favorite part of the magazine. Don't think I ever actually fell for x-ray glasses, but I bought a shitload of knives, including the "Rambo" survival knife on multiple occasions, sea monkeys, a few different stamp collecting kits, and I'm pretty sure my brother and I actually chipped in on the Charles Atlas body building plan once.

Screenshot 2023-12-03 10.11.17 AM.jpg
stamps.jpg


8bbc1758391fb615d0e02716a7e0649e.jpg



Screenshot 2023-12-05 7.25.08 PM.png
 
  • 5Like
  • 2Solidarity
Reactions: 6 users

zzeris

King Turd of Shit Hill
<Gold Donor>
19,950
81,547
Did anyone else buy stuff from the "Gifts and Gimmicks" section in the back of Boy's Life Magazine? It was by far my favorite part of the magazine. Don't think I ever actually fell for x-ray glasses, but I bought a shitload of knives, including the "Rambo" survival knife on multiple occasions, sea monkeys, a few different stamp collecting kits, and I'm pretty sure my brother and I actually chipped in on the Charles Atlas body building plan once.

View attachment 503168View attachment 503166

View attachment 503169


View attachment 503170

I also bought the Rambo knife and it was one of my prized possessions as a young teen.
 
  • 2Like
Reactions: 1 users

Edaw

Parody
<Gold Donor>
13,175
87,201
Did anyone else buy stuff from the "Gifts and Gimmicks" section in the back of Boy's Life Magazine? It was by far my favorite part of the magazine. Don't think I ever actually fell for x-ray glasses, but I bought a shitload of knives, including the "Rambo" survival knife on multiple occasions, sea monkeys, a few different stamp collecting kits, and I'm pretty sure my brother and I actually chipped in on the Charles Atlas body building plan once.

View attachment 503168View attachment 503166

View attachment 503169


View attachment 503170
the karate kid GIF

01e2a9a67fa2a509b11a97a4388e66f4.jpg

s-l1200_webp(1).png

s-l1200_webp.png
 
  • 4Like
Reactions: 3 users

Fidlen

Lord Nagafen Raider
195
586
Couple more. Wish I had a picture of the whole thing. Entire half of his basement is half retro and like 12 Ish of the arcade one up machines.

Edit - few more on facebook
Screenshot_20231205_231149_Gallery.jpg
Screenshot_20231205_231157_Gallery.jpg
FB_IMG_1701843526729.jpg
FB_IMG_1701843546242.jpg
FB_IMG_1701843550967.jpg
FB_IMG_1701843565835.jpg
 
Last edited:
  • 5Like
  • 2Mother of God
Reactions: 6 users

lurker

Vyemm Raider
1,507
3,271
Did anyone else buy stuff from the "Gifts and Gimmicks" section in the back of Boy's Life Magazine? It was by far my favorite part of the magazine. Don't think I ever actually fell for x-ray glasses, but I bought a shitload of knives, including the "Rambo" survival knife on multiple occasions, sea monkeys, a few different stamp collecting kits, and I'm pretty sure my brother and I actually chipped in on the Charles Atlas body building plan once.
I had one of these. Don't remember where I got it from. Could have been Boy's Life or maybe the back of a cereal box. You used to have to send in box tops as proof of purchase.

A baking soda powered submarine.

submarine-M.jpg


You'd pull the top off the conning tower, put a teaspoon of baking soda in there and seal it back up. When you put it in the bathtub a small amount of water was let in to react with the powder and a stream of bubbles would exit out the back along a ramp underneath the sub and propel the sub forward.
 
  • 4Like
  • 1Wow!
  • 1Solidarity
Reactions: 5 users

Palum

what Suineg set it to
26,289
40,630
I had one of these. Don't remember where I got it from. Could have been Boy's Life or maybe the back of a cereal box. You used to have to send in box tops as proof of purchase.

A baking soda powered submarine.

submarine-M.jpg


You'd pull the top off the conning tower, put a teaspoon of baking soda in there and seal it back up. When you put it in the bathtub a small amount of water was let in to react with the powder and a stream of bubbles would exit out the back along a ramp underneath the sub and propel the sub forward.
They had a GI Joe version of that submarine from the 90s
 

Aaron

Goonsquad Officer
<Bronze Donator>
8,660
20,180
Man some nostalgia here. Here's one thing I did not do myself, but remember my Father doing. He was one of the first people in my little neck of the woods to get a PC. I'm talking the first generation of IBM PCs here. To connect to the "Internet" (read: a BBS service) he first had to call up the local operator, order a foreign phone call, then when it was patched through to the UK, then connect the phone to the modem. Good times.

1701895398693.png


Speaking of IBM, while I was one of the first generations to learn to type in school on computers instead of typewriters, I still had to use one of these at my job right up until around 2020 when it finally went to a museum (literally, I was supposed to throw it away but I called a local cultural heritage museum and they wanted it).

1701895503408.png


Then there is the first cell phone my Father had... well, "car phone" was the correct term I think. Can't find the exact make but it was a bit similar to this only the phone rested on the top. The battery pack was attached to the side of the phone box. Probably weighed about 10 pounds or so.

1701895674813.png


Then there were the friends of my parents when I was young. I loved going to dinner with my parents to their house as after eating when the adults would sit and chat adult things, they would let me go into the TV room and watch Star Trek films on their LaserDisk.

1701895784413.png


Try to tell the younglings any of this and they ask you if you knew Fred Flintstone... or would if they knew who Fred Flintstone was.
 
  • 3Like
  • 1Solidarity
Reactions: 3 users

Aamry

Blackwing Lair Raider
2,354
2,067
Man some nostalgia here. Here's one thing I did not do myself, but remember my Father doing. He was one of the first people in my little neck of the woods to get a PC. I'm talking the first generation of IBM PCs here. To connect to the "Internet" (read: a BBS service) he first had to call up the local operator, order a foreign phone call, then when it was patched through to the UK, then connect the phone to the modem. Good times.

View attachment 503299

Speaking of IBM, while I was one of the first generations to learn to type in school on computers instead of typewriters, I still had to use one of these at my job right up until around 2020 when it finally went to a museum (literally, I was supposed to throw it away but I called a local cultural heritage museum and they wanted it).

View attachment 503300

Then there is the first cell phone my Father had... well, "car phone" was the correct term I think. Can't find the exact make but it was a bit similar to this only the phone rested on the top. The battery pack was attached to the side of the phone box. Probably weighed about 10 pounds or so.

View attachment 503301

Then there were the friends of my parents when I was young. I loved going to dinner with my parents to their house as after eating when the adults would sit and chat adult things, they would let me go into the TV room and watch Star Trek films on their LaserDisk.

View attachment 503302

Try to tell the younglings any of this and they ask you if you knew Fred Flintstone... or would if they knew who Fred Flintstone was.
Shit Fred Flintstone? I made a damn Doogie Howser joke the other day and no one knew who I was talking about.
 

lurker

Vyemm Raider
1,507
3,271
4642906-6690__17619.jpg


Pioneer Laserdisc Player. Mine had a mechanism that rotated the head around the disc so you didn't have to flip the disc half way through the movie. I also bought a little board some guy made that you installed inside the unit to upgrade it to AC-3 or 5.1 Dolby Digital.

Still have it in a box along with probably 50 discs. Lots of Japanese pressings of Disney stuff including "Song of the South". Good luck finding that movie these days. Unfortunately, laserdiscs suffered from what they called "rot" that eventually made the discs unplayable. Many of mine are probably in that condition.
 
  • 2Like
  • 1Solidarity
Reactions: 2 users

lurkingdirk

AssHat Taint
<Medals Crew>
46,153
211,231
Do you guys remember these things? Not computers, but word processors, had a tiny screen so it wouldn't print until you looked over text. They were absolutely horrible to work on.

41M1SH80NNL.jpg
 
  • 1Like
  • 1Solidarity
Reactions: 1 users

lurker

Vyemm Raider
1,507
3,271
2021-05-07-15.17.01-400x300.jpg


IBM Selectric. It's the one with the little ball that held all the characters. No carriage. The paper stayed still and the ball moved back and forth spinning around. You could change fonts in seconds by swapping out the ball. My receptionist typed all the invoices for our business on this machine (the one in the picture is not mine). All our billing was done by hand and typed out on 3 part NCR paper. NCR paper for those who don't know is how we produced multiple copies of a form without carbon paper. You know what carbon paper is, right?
 
  • 4Like
Reactions: 3 users