A year or so ago, an executive from an electronics company (Apple, if I remember correctly) spoke of the lack of innovation in television sets since the 1950s, and my reaction was “He’s either stupid or thinks I am.”
In the 1950s televisions had knobs on the set for changing channels. Remote controls were brand new, expensive, limited in capability, and used ultrasound rather than infra-red.
The screens were vacuum tubes, and most were monochrome. Color television was brand new, and it was nearly 1960 before any stations started broadcasting in color. Rather than being rectangular, color sets were almost round; even black and white sets weren’t true rectangles.
They had no transistors, let alone integrated circuits; the IC had yet to be invented, and transistors were only used by the military. They were a brand-new invention. TVs didn’t have the “no user-servicable parts” warning on the back. When the TV wouldn’t come on, as happened every year or three, the problem was almost always a burned out vacuum tube. One would open the back of the set and turn it on. Any tubes that weren’t lit were pulled, taken to the drug store or dime store for replacement. If that didn’t fix the problem you called an expert TV repairman.
The signal was analog, and often or usually suffered from static in the sound, and ghosts and snow in the picture.
There was no cable, and of course no satellite television since nothing built by humans had ever gone into space.
However, there is one thing about television that hasn’t changed a single iota: daytime TV programming.
In the 1950s most folks were well paid, and a single paycheck could easily pay for a family’s expenses. Most women, especially mothers, stayed home. As a result, daytime TV was filled with female-centric programming like soap operas, game shows, and the like. Usually there were cartoons in the late afternoon for the kids.
Today the rich have managed to get wages down so low that everyone has to have a job. The demographics of daytime television have radically changed as a result. Now, rather than housewives (of which few are left, and we now have house husbands), who can watch daytime TV? Folks home from work sick, both men and women, folks in the hospital, the unemployed, and retired people.
Yet daytime TV is still as female centered as it was when I was five. Soap operas, talk shows with female hosts and female guests discussing topics that would only appeal to women, and game shows.
What’s wrong with the idiots running our corporations these days?
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 01 2015, @12:24PM
Actually, the very first 'remotes' (if they could be called that) were wired. You got a dongle with a couple buttons, attached to a 20 or 30 foot long wire with a plug that looked like a headphone jack. You'd plug that into the TV somewhere, run the wire over to the couch, and you could "remotely" do whatever the remote let you do.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday December 02 2015, @08:50PM
There were wired remote controls (some cable boxes had them as well), but ultrasonic ones existed, too.
In the US, cheap, transformerless TV sets, e.g. the GE PortaColor, had the filaments (cathode heaters) wired in series; when a filament burned out (a common failure mode), it wasn't obvious which tube needed to be changed since they would all go dark. Good times.
(Score: 3, Interesting) by pixeldyne on Wednesday February 03 2016, @10:44AM
I was on a business trip to Queensland but fell sick for couple of days, staying in the hotel room. It was the first time I've switched on a TV in many years and every single channel had exactly what you're talking about. The only slightly more interesting thing to watch was a 24 hour news channel, but they must have had the stories on a loop. 10 TV channels and nothing to watch. I guess it's kind of like the apple App Store: so many apps and nothing interesting to get.