Site hosted by Angelfire.com: Build your free website today!

Not too long ago woke up with the cell phone alarm was science fiction. Thetechnology is moving so fast that in just a few years objects such as the fax, maps orfloppy disks that were the most, have been forgotten. These are the ten everyday objects that have disappeared:
track phone


Fax was created by the Scotsman Alexander Bain in 1846, which was able to reproducegraphic signs in laboratory experiments, though it was Frederick Bakewell which made several improvements and invented the fax machine that we know at present, so thefax machine was invented in times when many people moved still in carts. At least 80 percent of americans know what a fax, and more than 60 percent have used one,according to the Telecom Corner, but is not exactly one of the most used appliancesin everyday life, what's more, their use has been limited to the offices and in smallcases.



It is the first antecedent of the USB, with a capacity of 1.4 Mb, which when compared with the ability at the moment of their devices 1 Tb evolved, seem insignificant. At the end of the 1960s, IBM's engineers created a means of alternative storage for backupsor copies of important material and physical storage required masters copies. For suchreason, they developed the idea of a flexible magnetic disk protected by an externalstructure against environmental factors. They create the perfect device, but given his ability or obsolescence virtually have disappeared


Who has not seen in the gas stations the mythical Spanish group houses as Chichosor Camela? This childhood memory and the maturity of which has not spent a lot oftime but that in these times a child do not know say they are. This object was born in 1963 in the hands of the German inventor Lou Ottens for Philips and was able to record and play through magnetic tape. He became a popular alternative to vinyl forits durability and ease of shipment and especially because the music was rewritable! Inthe 80 's he lived his golden age until the arrival of the compact disc and, with it, the decline of this revolutionary object.



One of the most sought-after by collectors are the tapes with imaginative covers offilms of the 70s and 80s, arriving at stratospheric prices on the Internet and inspecialty stores. A clear example is a tape of the film "the beast in color" blendinggore and sex in concentration camps, and which was banned in the United Kingdomand that can cost more than 1,340 dollars, according to a collector named Dale Lloydin the newspaper The Telegraph. It was developed in the 1970s by Panasonic and up to the appearance of the DVD, the VHS was the most used and popular ever since its appearance until the 1990s and the end of the 20th century.


http://gps-phonetracker.net/gps-phone-tracker-mobile-tracker/
The serious of their albums, about 30 cm in diameter, and the fact that it was necessary to give them the vault disks in half of the film, became a format toocumbersome and destined to fail as that would create more innovations in this field.In this case the CD supplant its duties at the beginning of the 1980s. It was the firstcommercialized optical disk storage system and was used primarily for storage of data or video playback. It was initially distributed as DiscoVision in 1978, although inventedby David Paul Gregg in 1958.



The predecessor of the pager or pager is a device created in 1921 as a request of theDetroit Police Department, but wouldn't it be but in 1949 when it was invented and patented the first "search for" telephone for the inventor To Gross and his early teamswere used by the Jewish Hospital in New York. However, up to 10 years after the usregulator of communications in the United States, FCC, did not approve its use to the public. The popularity of these devices came in the 1990s, when they began the use oftelephones, which initially only offered voice service. The "beepers", were very popularbecause of its low cost, in comparison with the others. This trend of using the mobile phone networks ended when locators began to integrate its functions, and today are used only in very limited areas of employment.