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  • Youre walking down the street when you suddenly remember you need to call your bank.

  • Oh no, your phone battery’s at 1%! You look around and here it is: a pay phone booth!

  • And even better, there’s a phone book inside with the number you need. Come to think of

  • it, though, how many other seemingly obsolete things are still out there? And why?

  • 1. Fax machines If you were born in the 2000s, you probably

  • haven’t even heard of them. To use a fax machine, you need a printed copy of your document

  • and the recipient has to own another such machine too. Bulky and pretty unreliable,

  • fax machines became a thing of the past in the late 90s, when emails appeared, allowing

  • documents to be sent instantly and printed out by the receiving party. That is, except

  • in many hospitals they still use this technology. Despite having electronic records, they don’t

  • share them with each other for many reasons and thus rely on this outdated piece of equipment.

  • Hopefully, youll never have to visit a hospital, but if you do, don’t forget to

  • take a selfie with this digital dinosaur! 2. Photo labs

  • Back in the second half of the 20th century, developing films with your vacation photos

  • was all the rage. You had only 24 or 36 photos you could take before your film ended, so

  • you took them carefully and then went to a photo lab to see what you had. Today, with

  • smartphones capable of taking superior quality pictures in any number you like, developing

  • photos is a thing only professional photographers still do. So photo labs have gone, but not

  • completelyand they still offer their services to those interested.

  • 3. Encyclopedias How long has it been since you took an actual

  • book in your hands when you needed explanation of some term or phenomenon instead of just

  • googling it? Let me know down in the comments! I bet some people haven’t done it in their

  • life at all. But you can still see paper encyclopedias on the shelves of bookstoresand many

  • people, surprisingly, still use them. I guess some just can’t help holding a hardcover

  • book in their hands. Speaking of which… 4. Physical books and bookstores

  • In the age when we have e-readers designed specifically to rid you of the need to carry

  • physical copies of books, and even apps for phones and tablets allowing you to download

  • as many e-books as you like, it’s kinda strange to see so many bookstores still up

  • and running. Yet there they are, although now many of them have changed their profile

  • a lot. Most importantly, a bookshop has become not just a joint where you can buy a new novel

  • by your favorite author, but a place to sit back, have a cup of tea or coffee, and relax

  • in a comfortable chair, reading right there. Admit it, reading in comfort and without a

  • hurry is a much more pleasant experience than doing it in transport or even at home where

  • there are so many distractions. 5. VHS tapes

  • Gone are the days when you recorded family events on a Super-8 and watched it later from

  • VHS tapes on your player. And even CD players that came later are now a rarityeverything’s

  • on hard drives now or even on the web, where itll stay for a very long time, if not

  • forever, or replaced itself by something newer or better. But surprisingly, though theyre

  • gone from households, there are still VHS tapes that are incredibly rare and valuable

  • even today. For example, there’s a Star Wars sealed box tape for sale on eBay that

  • costs $3,500. And owners of Disney Black Diamond series video cassettes, which got its name

  • for a black diamond symbol on every box, sometimes ask astronomical sums for their treasures.

  • It’s best to do your research, though, because some of the prices are simply crazy for no

  • good reason. 6. Photo albums

  • Some decades ago, any family reunion eventually came to a point where the hosts retrieved

  • a huge family album and started showing their guests all the photos in their archive. Today,

  • with Instagram and digital pictures all around, it seems obsolete, but almost any photographer

  • you ask will offer you to make a photo album of your own. That’s because such things

  • never really get old: a nicely decorated album with your photos may even become a good present

  • to someone you love, or just be a warm reminder of things you’d like to remember.

  • 7. Old cell phones A smartphone is basically a full-blown portable

  • computer that you can use for a variety of things, from checking your social media to

  • actually doing all your work on it. This can’t be said of the first mobile phones of the

  • 90s and early 2000s, which were little more than bricks with buttons that you could talk

  • and send short messages with. Still, theyre quite popular today, and for a good reason:

  • unlike smartphones and tablets, these simple devices are very hard to track, so if youre

  • worried about being watched, an old cell phone is a really good choice. Better yet, you can

  • use… 8. Pay phones

  • It’s really convenient to have your own phone to call anyone from anywhere in the

  • world, but cellular network is not as sturdy as we all wish it was, and it doesn’t cover

  • the whole planet yet. In some distant areas of the world, you’d be stranded without

  • any connection if not for pay phones that are still installed in many countries. Also,

  • in case of a natural disaster, pay phones often remain intact while both cellular network

  • and landlines go downtheyre built to withstand a lot of damage and ensure connection

  • even in dire circumstances. 9. Pagers

  • Wait, now, what’s a pager? It’s a little device, like a small radio, that receives

  • messages sent to it from a phone. You can’t send messages from it, so it’s only works

  • as a receiver. They were extremely popular at some point in the 90s, but for obvious

  • reasons they soon became outdated and replaced by more versatile mobile phones. But pagers

  • haven’t become some old junkrather, one of them just might save your life one

  • day. Paramedics and emergency care workers use this little piece of tech in their everyday

  • jobs even today. Pagers are more resilient, able to take a lot of damage before turning

  • off, they have much more battery life than a smartphone, and their design is conveniently

  • intuitive, so theyre perfect for such conditions. 10. Copper pennies

  • These coins are probably the most useless piece of stuff on my list: if youve met

  • a person who actually uses pennies to pay for something, pat them on the back. By and

  • large, pennies are next to worthless, but theyre still being widely circulated. And

  • if you dig a bit deeper, youll even find out that the cost of producing a penny is

  • more than it’s actually worth: 1.7 cents for a 1 penny coin.

  • 11. Vinyl records Hey, vintage lovers out there, youll probably

  • say that vinyl discs aren’t obsolete in the least, but that’s what they are in our

  • modern age, sorry. But in any case, the rugged, warm quality of sound they give and the feeling

  • of authenticity when listening to the great bands of the 20th century makes lots of audiophiles

  • around the world collect vinyl records and keep them as the treasure they certainly are.

  • 12. Landlines Who uses landline anymore when there are smartphones?

  • Well, the decline of stationary phones is obvious, and theyre all but gone from households,

  • but many businesses still cling to this piece of technology, and in some countries banks

  • won’t even give you a loan if you don’t own a landline. As they explain, having a

  • landline means you own a home or at least have some place to liveas if having a

  • job record wasn’t enough. Anyway, although were looking at landlinescomplete disappearance

  • in the coming years, theyre still quite strong in many ways.

  • Finally: What’s more lasting than all of this technology? Graham crackers. Delicious!

  • Haven’t changed in over a hundred years, and will probably outlast us all! Don’t

  • you just love graham crackers? Hey, if you learned something new today, then

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Youre walking down the street when you suddenly remember you need to call your bank.

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