"Number
please?" from cheery voice of telephone operator soon as obsolete as land
line phones
By
Michael J Morris
When I
was a kid growing up in a relatively isolated community in Northern Ontario in
the 1940s, we didn't even have a telephone in the house.
Then the
local telephone company added more lines and we got a party line with another home,
and by picking up the phone i heard the cheery voice of the telephone operator
ask, "Number please?"
Soon
thereafter, we got our own number which I still recall was 188, and during the
1960s when i was away from home at university and working as a newspaper
reporter, operator assisted local calls were still in effect. In fact,
I recall
phoning the Chapleau operator late at night from wherever I was, and catching
up on the local news. The operators knew everything and everybody.
For
example, if I was calling Butch at home, the operator may say, "He is not
there, He's at the Boston. He just called Roger from there."
Rotary
dial phones and the beginning of the end for operator assisted calls, came to
my small community about the end of the 1960s
In 2015,
the "land line phone" as they came to be called in recent years may
soon be obsolete.
According
to an article by Tamara Gignac in the Calgary Herald long time ago on December
27, 2013, "Land line phones — once deemed essential — are increasingly
becoming irrelevant as younger users rely on cellphones or technologies such as
Skype to communicate."
Just try
and find a landline phone in the Calgary International Airport for example, and
for years I had trouble calling my buddy to tell him where I was in Orlando
International Airport. But, progressive city that it is, they now have
converted former pay phones into complimentary one for local calls.
I use
Skype, Facebook, Twitter and email to communicate and still have a land
line phone, but I also have a new cell phone. I primarily text on it, and
when I'm having coffee in a restaurant, place it on the table just to show I am
"with it" like everyone else in the place.
Gignac
quoted Tom Keenan, a professor in the University of Calgary's faculty of
environmental design that In some ways, the 'classic land line' is already
following in the footsteps of the rotary dial.
Professor
Keenan predicts: “In the future, as phones merge with wristbands and smart
watches, the land line will become a curiosity and houses will be built without
them..."
In 2015 I
am celebrating 21 years since I taught my first Writing for New Media course at
College of the Rockies.My first fearless prediction was that the only constant
in society was change -- and trust me on this one, I had a tough audience. Most
of my students in that first class were college instructors, elementary and
secondary school teachers and a smattering of college students.
The
majority would not even agree that email would come into common use. And that's
fact. I had business cards printed with my email on it. Only problem was, I had
nobody to email.
Gignac
also quoted Jim Carroll, a trends and innovation expert: “We live in a
world where technology enters our life, becomes a part of our life and then,
boom, it’s gone."
These
days I have been reflecting on "Living in Michael's World", the title
of a presentation that a colleague made to COTR New Media Communications
students circa 1997 about my fearless predictions for the future. Stay tuned,
and please feel free to share your thoughts with me. My email is mj.morris@live.ca
I may
even share my new phone number with you so we can text each other.
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