kraftiekortie wrote:
I was born in 1961, so I was in my 20's in the 80's.
I was amazed at the sudden proliferation of video shops around 1983, where there had been none in 1982--places like Blockbusters.
I played my share of Ms PacMan, Donkey Kong, Centipede, etc. The last video game I played a lot was "Tron," whose levels were the names of computer programs.
TV's started getting better in the late 80's. We no longer had to use rabbit's ears because of cable. HDTV was far into the future. Analog TV's pictures were of good quality in the late 80's, though. The decade started with the usual crap associated with rabbit's ears TV: snow, pictures jumping up and down, people having to stomp on the floor to get a proper picture, etc.
We started being able to buy our own phones, instead of "renting" them from Ma Bell. No cell phones yet, though--however, stylish people had phones in their cars. Answering machines, which were always separate from the phone in those days, were becoming ubiquitous. I don't believe we had cordless phones yet, for the most part, during the 1980s.
The music became very syntho and New Wave in the early 80's. Arena Rock, as exemplified by groups like Van Halen, still had its place. During the late 80's, dance music became more popular. Alternative Rock started going mainstream.
Most people had cut their hair by about 1982; from about 1969 to 1981, the average man had hair below the ears; afterwards, for the most part, the length stayed above the ears.
There was, for all intents and purposes, no internet---but people started owning personal computers. There was a brief period, right before the advent of the personal computer, where word processors were quite popular. Typewriters were becoming obsolete--but wouldn't become totally obsolete until the 1990s. Nowadays, it is quite possible that a child would not even know what a typewriter is.
Cars in the "low" and "middle" end were very boxy and square/rectangular. They tended not to last a very long time, either. Cars last much longer nowadays.
Rap music started getting into the mainstream around the middle of the decade. Before then, it was selling--but was considered strictly "urban" music.
We still had "records," alongside cassettes. CD's became really popular around 1989 or so, thereby rendering "records" obsolete.
Walkmen, which played cassettes, and were also AM FM radios, were ubiquitous. Early in the decade, people used to carry 40 pound stereo systems on their shoulders. By the middle of the decade, the Walkman, and rules forbidding the playing of music within public transportation, rendered those monstrosities obsolete. Smaller boomboxes, however, remained until the 1990s.
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