Tech Talk |

By Mathew Dickerson
February 8 2018 - 8:00pm

THE OLD DAYS AND THE SIMPLE PHONECALL

It was way back in 1989 that I had finished with the fun of living at a University College and moved into a flat with some friends. The first analogue cellular mobile phone call was made in Australia on 23 February 1987 so very few people actually had a mobile – and certainly not millennials struggling to pay the rent in Newtown. The four of us living in a flat had an old-fashioned landline (only one outlet) and when we made phone calls, we wrote down in a little book beside the phone where the call was made and for how long. At the end of the month, we would tally up all the calls and it would inevitably fall short of the total non-itemised bill. It was clumsy and time-consuming – but we knew no better. t was only several years later when itemised billing was introduced and this was seen as a huge step forward. Bills started coming out with every call made and the cost of every call. Now that would have made life easier. I have never been able to find out if it was just an urban myth or real but apparently divorce rates spiked at this time as partners started questioning certain numbers called when they saw them on the bill – and they were found to be calls made to people who were more than just ‘friends’. Apart from this minor inconvenience for people who were caught with their pants down (literally) the introduction of itemised bills was a technological leap forward.

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