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193 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 1364
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Title: HPR1364: Vintage Tech Iron Pay Phone Coin Box
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1364/hpr1364.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 00:17:12
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---
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Howdy folks, this is 5150 for Hacker Public Radio, and today I want to...well this is
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a topic I've been kicking around my head for a while to tell you about, but actually
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I was moved off-center bubble by John Culp's diversion into legacy technology with his
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Vectrola. And while you folks don't know about me, I am an avid collector of old
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mechanical banks. Now, not the real-old, very rare these these days, iron
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mechanical banks that start to emerge, I think in 1840s or 1850s, I can't afford
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anything like that. But there was a resurgence in the middle of the last century,
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in the 1950s with reproductions that are quite affordable, and I've got a
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pretty good collection of those, and you know the banks I'm talking about, the
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Uncle Sam, you put the quarter in his hand, and you throw the lever, and the hand
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comes down, the satchel opens up, and he takes your money. Which pretty much the way
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the government works to this day. But I would really like to do a series on
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that on those, but that's really a very, with all the mechanical actions that's a
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very video-oriented series. If I do anything, I'll do it on video, and post the links
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here, maybe maybe with the audio track, but to really see what I'm talking about,
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you'll need to watch the videos. And I've progressed for several types of banks.
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I mean, they're, I really like the mechanical banks, where there's more
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several actions happening at once. There are a lot of banks where there's just one
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thing like they go. Jockey banks or whatever you put, you put the coin in the
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horse's mouth, and you press the switch, and the horse wings up and over the
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fence and drops it in, and we just a single action. That's not very interesting to
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me. I like the ones where there's two or three actions going on at once, and I
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have most of those banks, at least three productions. And the interesting thing,
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one of the reasons I wanted to do the video series on the banks, there's just a
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derth of information on the internet on mechanical bank collecting. They're
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just, there's just nothing out there. It must be a very, very close society. Most
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of stuff I've learned is just by hanging around eBay and finding out where I
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can afford, where I can afford. So I'm hoping when I do go into my series on
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mechanical banks, I can maybe help some folks who are maybe a little lost on
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the subject. Like I said, there, well, there, there were a lot of regional
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mechanical banks, but there was a subset of them that were recreated in the
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1940s in 50s. And most of those that I'm really interested in, I already have.
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And then I expanded out because there, there are various other more modern banks.
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Well, there, there was a lot of stuff in the 1950s that looked like a buck
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Roger spaceships, because see that we were just on the cusp in the late 1950s,
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early 60s of the space program. And there are a lot of these banks, they would
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sell them in toy stores, but most of them went out to kids, opening bank accounts
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for just a couple bucks. And there, you know, there's a whole series of half a
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dozen or more really neat space oriented banks. And I like those because where
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you get those, those are the original thing. They're not a reproduction. And
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then there are several 10 banks. There are, they're very interesting. There are
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calendar banks where you've got to put a penny or nickel in every day to collect
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the calendar over. And then there are other similar banks that I find really
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interesting that are meant to finance a specific goal mainly. Well, a couple
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examples are sewing machines and encyclopedias. Back in the old days, encyclopedias
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were very expensive. You didn't buy the whole set of encyclopedias at once. You
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bought another volume, maybe every two or three months. And I've got some banks
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for like callers and et cetera, that are meant to you, you put your money in
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and it counts your money. And then when it rolls over, you've got the money to
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buy the next volume of your encyclopedias and say, well, I've got ones for
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sewing machines that when you fill the bank up, then you've got enough to buy
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your sewing machine. And then there's a lot, there's a lot of counter banks
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financial litter are meant so that it will only open up a specific amount, say
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$10 or $20 or whatever. Like I said, those are more, those are more modern, but
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they're not reproductions. They're the actual banks. And in the early 1970s,
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oh, these are really neat to me. There was series, at least three different types
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that I have of transistor radio banks. And play the, I mean, it is, is a little
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right, it looks like a jewel box, but you lift the lead and also looks like
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under the lid, it looks like one of these big console systems. You remember what
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your parents or grandparents maybe had that had the TV in the center and then
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you had the high five sets and you had the big speakers on either side. Well,
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it's, it looks kind of like that. So you open up the lid and you drop it a coin
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could be a penny, whatever, but that actually makes a contact to make the radio
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work. And then you, you know, you listen to the transistor radio, what ball
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gains from music or whatever turns you on. And then when you're done listening,
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you press the button and the coin falls through into the coin bank. And you
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know, so you're done till you have another coin. Those are, those are neat. What
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else? Oh, and I've got all kinds of slot machine banks. Most of them not working
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so you could ever pay off. I've got one that would actually pay off as a slot
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machine if you wanted to. But I think a lot of those, I always used to see them
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in the series catalog and wonder why anybody want one back in the toys section.
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But I think a lot of them were to separate people from their money back out
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in Vegas. I mean, somebody's a high roller, you had all these, you know, one
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of bunch of money, you had all these little shops to try to get the money back
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before they left town. And the, the little, sometimes, sometimes battery
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operated, sometimes purely mechanical slot machine banks were one little
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gimmick, sell them something as a moment of their visit. See where they're
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typed? You know, I clock banks. That's another one. Sometimes it's completely
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separate deals a clock and it's a bank. I've got those. But the most interesting
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ones were it's set up to keep the clock running. You have to put in a coin
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every day. I've got a British wood that requires a farthing to keep, to keep
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working every day. Okay. So this is really not getting as any farther along
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the technology I wanted to talk about day though. But this was market on. I bought
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this deal off eBay and it was marketed as the coin box for a pay phone.
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Yeah, you've served me to turn it over probably. And I thought looking at it, this
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is the worst toy pay phone that I've ever seen because it's just a metal box
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with key in the bottom at the top. You've got slots for 25 cents, 10 cents, and
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5 cents. Well, one, it wasn't that terribly expensive. I think I got it for 25
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bucks shipped. So I brought home and then I realized it was, it won the toy. So I
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did some research. Now, the funny thing is, till I had this, I never realized how
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a pay phone actually works. Because I grew up in the day before cell phones. I
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mean when I was a young adult college high school, sometimes I would have to call
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home on a pay phone when I was away from home. And it always puzzled me that the
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pay phone always said, wait for the operator to come online before you put in
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money. I suppose the operator got to deal with it because I, you know, I was used
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to of course, vending machines that you put it electronic and non-electronic
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vending machines. If you put your money in and it would record the money, know how
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much money put in. And I always assume, really, until I bought this thing, oh, four
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years ago, that was how a pay phone worked. But the deal is, you know, that the
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pay phones were set up, you know, pay phones concept came way before a digital
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transmission of information over phone lines. So the cool thing about how
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pay phone actually works. And I think still this day, you know, I bought this
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little box got, you know, heavy. Oh, man, really heavy. It's got, this thing got
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away 15 pounds. But, you know, and still, staff still outside and then cast
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started on the inside. And the folks are following home. These are pictures I
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haven't taken yet. But if you, if you look from the outside, it's this rectangular
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box at the top, you've got like slots, mark 25, 10 and 5. Right below that, there's
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a place, I guess, the slip of card is that would be the phone number or the
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business name or whatever. And then down at the bottom on the front side. And I
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don't have this key. But there, there's a box kind of like a post office box at
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the bottom where the money drawer is. So you take key and remove your money. If
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you flip it over to the backside, you want to picture that too. You will see
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what's going on that below each of those 25, 10 and 5 slots. There are these
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channels, you know, running down and around and around inside the box. And all of
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them, terminating in a bell. It's like the sort of concave bell on an inside
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hotel phone if you were taking one apart. So all these coins would come in and
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strike the inside of this bell. And you can see, once you see this, this is so
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constructed with very, very length tracks that each of these, each of the three
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coins, quarter and diamond nickel are going, when they're dropped in, they're
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going to hit this bell at completely different velocities. And in that way,
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make a different tone. And this is, this is why the operator had to be online
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before you put your coins in. Because there is no digital mechanical interface. It
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says, well, this is, this is how much money the color has dropped in. And then
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brings it up on the screen for the operators. This is, you know, long before such
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things existed. This, the operator was actually trained to know the different
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things, as it were, the different, audible signs of when a quarter or a nickel
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or a dime was dropped into the payphone. And in that way, they could determine
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how much time you got. So if you, if you start dropping your coins in before
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the operator came on, well, there was just no point because the operator had,
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yeah, there was no way of recording how much money you dropped in. Still, the
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parts you may find are remarkable about this device. It may have been sold to me
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as a payphone coin box. But obviously, there's no phone to it. It's just a
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coin box. So I did a little research on old phones, old pay phones. There, there
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is some information on that online. In fact, quite a bit. Oh, I, I tell you what, I
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found out. I would love, you know, to, to put a actual real payphone on my wall.
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Of course, set it up so I don't have to put coins in it to dial out. But they're
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on eBay, mate. You just cannot touch the things. You even modern ones, much less
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finish. Just forget about it. Okay. So, got this box here with the bell. You drop
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the coins in, makes, makes the bell ring at different tones depending on what
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coin you use by looking up online and the original payphones were not set up as
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all one unit. You would have just a regular old wooden crank phone where you pick
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up the receiver and stick it in your ear. And you, you're talking to, crank it up,
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talking to mouthpiece and say, Mabel, connect me to Firefly 2.6. That type of
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phone. But in a public location where they want you to pay for your phone calls,
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you would have a box like this screwed up to in the wall right next to it. And
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when you want to make a long distance call, you would take the receiver and put it up next
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to this box and then, you know, and bring you, of course, break the operator online.
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And then you would drop your coins into it and she would, well, that's on sexist. They
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definitely in those days, they were all female. Drop your coins in and she would hear
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it through the receiver in the part you would pick up off the phone. You just hold it
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next to the box. Because when they would do this, I mean, this, this was an attraction
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back in the days before people had phones in their, in their own house. For businesses,
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this would be attraction to put people to bring people in. So the provider, he would
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get a built-in in the month he would be responsible for paying for all the long distance calls
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and acceptor that came out from his place. And so, of course, he would unlock this
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coin box. Like I said, I don't have a key for it. And from the coins in the coin box,
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pay for those calls and went out through his phone. And he might have had a little left
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over for himself at the end of the month. I rather suspect this is marketed as a tool
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to bring people into your business. So I would, I would bet the average business didn't
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do rather more than break even on the proceeds from their pay phone. Okay. Well, this is
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a little bit of history that, oh, oh, no, let me go on. This box I have is, from the
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example I've seen online, is rather very extremely plain. Most of these pay phone
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calling boxes were extremely ornate. At least the ones I've seen online, the one I've
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seen all, oh, man, I would love to have. But of course, chuck a money in there. If you
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could get it, it, it, it functionally is the same thing. But it's all the, you know,
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the American shield with the eagle. You see, you got the big American eagle and the shield
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in the center and the arrows gripped in the talons. And some place in there, there was
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a place to drop in coins. And just similarly, what I have is just hung on the wall right
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next to a conventional crank up phone. So, and I will apologize if any of this is seen
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a little wondering tonight because I recorded this after the episode two of now you installed
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arched Linux. Now what do I do from a Linux newbie, which in that one I said, well, I
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just recorded that after a dev random. And there's a slight possibility that I might be intoxicated.
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But I hope between this and looking at the pictures that I'm going to take later in post
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to go along with the podcast that you found this either edifying or entertaining. And as
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always, I've been 5150 and you can find my contact information at the bigredswitch.druplegardons.com.
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Thanks for listening. Let's hope tomorrow brings a better podcast than this.
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