So kids can't figure out how to release a catch, or even figure out that something goes in the thing? What do they think "eject" means?
My Walkman saved my sanity when I spent 5 weeks in the hospital many years ago. I asked my dad to bring it, some extra batteries, and my music tapes.
Those "kids react" videos are awesome. I loved the one where they asked kids how you could text on a rotary phone.
Some adults are like that, too, if they haven't encountered the older/different tech before. A friend once asked me how I could possibly save anything if I only had an Amiga 500 and no internet connection.
She finally got it when I explained that the information was saved to plastic disks, which were put in/removed from the disk drive... kinda like VHS tapes in a VCR.
Anyone own a vehicle that only had an AM radio or got one of those newfangled 8 tracks?
8 tracks in case someone doesn't know what they are.
https://www.google.com/search?q=8+t...i4DABg&sqi=2&ved=0CAYQ_AUoAQ&biw=1600&bih=759
I still have an 8-track recording of one of William Shatner's Star Trek appearances. Mind you, I don't have anything to play it on anymore...
You can still buy a Discman. London Drugs sells them. The Staples website advertises them, but try going into a store and asking for them? When I did that last year, the salesclerk looked at me blankly, then snottily told me, "They haven't made those in YEARS. You have to go to a pawn shop." She had no answer when I asked, "Then why did I see a couple of models advertised on your website YESTERDAY?"
So I informed her she'd just lost a sale (I do not accept attitude like that from store employees; she could have just said politely that she didn't know, and asked a manager to help me). Then I ordered from London Drugs (a bit more expensive, but without the snotty attitude). The next day I called the Staples manager and told him that one of his employees needed a bit of a refresher in customer service.