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Comments on Puzzle #28300: Remember this one?
By Norma Dee (norm0908)

peek at solution       solve puzzle
  quality:   difficulty:   solvability: line logic only  

Puzzle Description Suppressed:Click below to view spoilers

#1: valerie o..travis (bigblue) on Jul 5, 2016

oh yeah bell :)
#2: Tom King (sgusa) on Jul 5, 2016
Nice one, Norma!
#3: Donna McFarland (jade8114) on Jul 5, 2016
AT & T's first logo. AT&T was actually founded by the inventor of the telephone, Alexander Graham Bell himself, in 1876. The bell is a nod to their famous creator, Alexander Graham Bell. The bell was painted a pleasing shade of blue to represent the future that AT&T strived to work toward. This logo attained an incredible recognition rate within the United States and was unchanged for years.
#4: Norma Dee (norm0908) on Jul 5, 2016
Shipping your box of sunshine by carrier pigeon, Travis. Sorry it's such a tiny box. It's all he could carry.

I first found that this logo belonged to AT&T which surprised me. But they used it after acquiring Bell who used it first.

Thank you, Tom K
#5: Teresa K (fasstar) on Jul 5, 2016
Great aha! moment with this one. Fun puz, Norma.
#6: Aldege Cholette (aldege) on Jul 5, 2016
Well done Norma. I wonder how many of you know that Alexander Graham Bell was a Canadian. He was born in Brantford Ontario same small city as The Great One Wayne Gretzky. :)
#7: Norma Dee (norm0908) on Jul 5, 2016
Thank you, Teresa and Aldege and thanks for the info, Aldege.
#8: besmirched tea (besmirched tea) on Jul 5, 2016
Ah, good ol' Ma Bell

That was long before the days when long distance became essentially free. I had a girlfriend who lived about 25 miles away, and I spent so much each month calling her long distance that I couldn't afford to buy a car to actually go see her
#9: Norma Dee (norm0908) on Jul 5, 2016
I called a friend I had met in college who lived a couple of miles away and I did not realize it was long distance. My parents were furious.
#10: Jill Tallmer (Yidl) on Jul 6, 2016
This logo looks beautiful in pixels
#11: Norma Dee (norm0908) on Jul 6, 2016
Thank you, JT.
#12: JoDeen Mozena (ozymoe) on Jul 6, 2016 [SPOILER]
Comment Suppressed:Click below to view spoilers
#13: Aldege Cholette (aldege) on Jul 6, 2016
lol JoDeen. :)
#14: Norma Dee (norm0908) on Jul 6, 2016
One of my favorite songs. :)
#15: Susan Nagy (susannagy54) on Jul 8, 2016
I remember rotary dial phones. I remember dialing seven digits to get a number in the same area code. I remember dialing the area code + the number to get a number out of the area code (without dialing the "one" first). I also remember when we started dialing the leading "one". I'm sorry, I do not remember this logo.
#16: Kristen Vognild (kristen) on Jul 8, 2016
Darn, I came in too late to make a Ma Bell comment, so here's an article by Uncle Wiki: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Breakup_of_the_Bell_System
#17: Norma Dee (norm0908) on Jul 8, 2016
Susan, do you remember when we had two Alpha letters at the beginning of our telephone number? Mine was WO for Woodland.
#18: Brian Bellis (mootpoint) on Jul 10, 2017
I think that I remember a time when you didn't actually own your phone. It was the property of Ma Bell and you rented it.
#19: Norma Dee (norm0908) on Jul 10, 2017
You are right, Brian. I can remember that. Here's an article from the NY Times Dec. 1982: http://www.nytimes.com/1982/12/16/business/new-era-for-the-telephone-ownership-replacing-rental.html?pagewanted=all
#20: John Macdonald (perlwolf) on Jul 10, 2017
Heh, at our cottage we still rent a rotary dial phone from Bell Canada. It's actually cheaper to rent, because if we switched to a phone of our own we would lose the much cheaper party line. When we first got the party line, there were about 10 phones on the line. They had 5 different ring cadences, but only half of them would ring. (The phone system would use either a positive or negative ring signal to cause only half of the phones to ring - that why you couldn't switch to using a standard phone and had to use the rented phone.) It been well over a decade since there were any other parties on the "party line" - they long ago stopped allowing people to get a party line and only those who already had one could keep it, everyone else has had their cottage get a new owner and had to get off the party line over the years. When we first got the phone, we could call other phones on the same exchange dialling only 5 digits (and the first digits were always 78 - it was a small exchange). The full number was 657-8xxx but you only needed that if you were calling in from somewhere else.
#21: Norma Dee (norm0908) on Jul 10, 2017
What an interesting blast from the past. We did not have a party line, but had friends who did and could not talk to them long or they would be accused of hogging the line.
#22: BlackCat (BlackCat) on Mar 29, 2018
Did not do. Look too symmetrical. I don't enjoy those.
#23: Joe Fischer (joefish) on Mar 29, 2018
I grew up in a samll town where you only needed to dial 5 digits: 5-3227. Our three digit prefix was 275, but if you asked someone what their number was they would tell you "Bridge 5-3227" Bridge was for the B and R that were associated with the 2 and 7.
#24: Koreen (mom24plus) on Oct 28, 2020 [SPOILER]
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#25: Joe (infrapinklizzard) on Nov 17, 2022 [SPOILER]
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