From Past to Present

From Past to Present

In this new age of development we take simple things like a telephone, a refrigerator, or a car, all for granted. We live in a world of luxuries and comforts compared to the average person in the 19th century. Lets say you were born prior to 1945. Just stop and consider the changes you might have witnessed. You were before television, before penicillin, frozen foods, Xerox copiers, contact lenses, and the Pill. You were before radar, credit cards, split atoms, ball point pens, dishwashers, air conditioners, and before man walked on the Moon. You never heard of F.M. radio, tape decks, electric typewriters, artificial hearts, yoghurt and blokes with earrings! In the 1940's, Made in Japan meant JUNK, and the term making out referred to how you did in an exam. Pizzas, Instant Coffee and McDonalds weren't heard of. In your day, cigarette smoking was fashionable, grass was something you mowed, Coke was a cold drink, Aids were people who helped others and pot was a name for something you cooked in. People made do with what they didn?t have! Today?s world is growing ever dependant on technology. The telephone for example is something we all take for granted. Every house is expected to have one and if we find there is no phone, we seem to think that it is abnormal. The question, however is, why is the telephone the cornerstone of modern life? The telephone allows us nearly instant connections - between friends, families, businesses, and nations - enable communications that enhance our lives, industries, and economies. Truly, the telephone has brought the human family together. With remarkable innovations, engineers have brought us from copper wire to fibre optics, from switchboards to satellites, and then the Internet. Initially a tool to link research centre computers, the Internet has become a vital instrument of social change. The Internet is changing business practices, educational pursuits, and personal communications. By providing...

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