in the 80s you could call AAA and tell them where you're planning to go on a road trip and they would send you a spiralbound roadmap of the route with gas stations, hotels, and construction zones highlighted
Part of me still misses TripTiks. It was fun to go through them ahead of trips and always have that nicely printed, spiral bound book with you on the road.
At some point in the 90s they automated TripTiks with the idea that you'd print them at home yourself. It was all the same info but the magic was gone.
My grandma actually recommended I do this last year. I was already contacting AAA about some other thing, and jokingly brought up road trips. They went, "Yeah we can help!" I was kinda adorable.
Maybe a call centre operated by map producers, intended more for questions about routes and conditions rather than "take the third left" kind of navigation.
Yeah, it sounds like the kind of thing you could do but would pay out the butt for as a private service. Road map books and asking directions were my go-to.
Of course, post-internet but pre-GPS there was always mapquest.
Rest area payphones. Its why most rest areas have a huge blown up atlas map these days
edit: and as a note, the death of the rest area payphone is a huge problem some places. you ever look at a coverage map for west virginia? you break down or get lost out there and you're totally fucked
This is actually a map of the Netherlands and I'm from there. I'm also old enough to remember a time without mobile phones. This was probably the call centre for triple AAA, in Dutch the ANWB. We had these emergency telephone poles along the highways. When stranded (car broke down) and without a map you could easily call aid through them with these phones, which they also knew where they were, for easy dispatching.
I'm also dutch, and Im pretty sure you couldn't call for route advice from the ANWB poles. Or at least, you couldn't in the later years, maybe it was different in the 60s.
It does make a lot more sense these people are planners, not general navigation advisers.
These still exist, except it's not a number you call, it's a shortwave station that you tune into.
Check out http://websdr.org/ if you don't have your own. From there you can play with various shortwave radios from around the world. The first one on my list is my favorite cause it picks up a lot of stuff.
I lived in Chicago from 2004 to 2007 and NYC from 2007 to 2009 and I did not have a smartphone not even sure if they were around then. There was a number you could text the cross streets you were at and the cross streets you wanted to go to and it would give you step by step directions to get there with public transportation. I used it daily.
The irony being how much the standard quality of life has dropped compared to the people seen working in this photo. At some point, expect to be just another pest barely tolerated within the urban environment. For many homeless, that's what they already are.
I disagree. It has changed and morphed. The weights have shifted, some parts have gotten better, while others have dropped. Overall, quality of life is better now than it was in 1960. Of course this is all immensely subjective and the viewpoint of a homeless person in Moskou cannot be compared to a family man working middle management in Los Angeles.
Yes, the quality of life is certainly better not being able to afford a home with two working couples and being forced to go into debt for decades... That's why no one ever has any beef with boomers who regurgitate things like your comment.
Sure we lost that particular job, but we also gained the job of driving around with a cam car collecting data. Then there's who ever takes all those pictures and compiles them into street view. Sure its highly automated, but someone had to automate it..
Imgine what the hunters thought when they lost their jobs to farms.
Also rembered what community this was on after I typed all that out.....