70 pointsby Kaibeezy8 hours ago15 comments
  • joezydeco6 hours ago
    The box in Meols, Merseyside has been turned into a small museum honoring the band Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark. The box was their makeshift booking office in the early days and the box's number (6323003) was used in the song "Red Frame White Light"

    "To this day, it is still likely the highest-charting song entirely about a public phone box."

    https://www.thek6project.co.uk/2022/08/30/meols-merseyside-c...

    https://www.atlasobscura.com/places/omd-telephone-box

    • jamiek882 hours ago
      I grew up on the Wirral and and moved to USA in my early twenties I’m nearly 50 now and that 632 3003 gave me absolute frisson mate, nice one.
  • HarHarVeryFunny6 hours ago
    I grew up with these things, but they look so weird now, like a Tardis.

    I remember having fun as a kid placing a reverse charge call from one phone booth to another across the street. Apparently the operator didn't have a way of knowing the number you were asking to make a call to was a phone booth, so your buddy across the street answers the operators call and graciously agrees to accept the reverse charge call (which is then free - no need to put any money in).

    • dwd12 minutes ago
      The few iconic blue police boxes that are left also need to be protected.
  • trebligdivad14 minutes ago
    Wasn't there a short period where they changed the colour? I'm thinking it was a beige thing - in the 80s???
  • Kaibeezy6 hours ago
    If curious why I posted this:

      - someone told me about a fish—n-chip buffet in Arbroath, Scotland
      - I told my team, one of them asked “just fish?”
      - I replied “batter fried pizza too”
      - one of them made the inevitable comment about defibrillators
      - I pointed out many of these red kiosks have been repurposed to hold defibrillators and went looking for images
    • dijksterhuis6 hours ago
      > someone told me about a fish-n-chip buffet in Arbroath, Scotland

      if it’s the fish and chip shop (buffet is a different thing here), i’ve been there and they do a banging fish supper.

      • Kaibeezy6 hours ago
        The Bellrock lunch buffet, £15 weekdays.

        “3 courses including Soup, Pizzas, Haddock, Spicy Fish, White pudding, King Rib, Chefs dish of the day. Hot desserts with Custard, Cold desserts i.e trifle and cakes, Cold Meats, Pasta, Salad, Whippy Ice cream.”

        https://www.thebellrock.co.uk/lunch-buffet

      • tonylucas6 hours ago
        I think OP is referring to this https://www.thebellrock.co.uk/lunch-buffet which does appear to be a fish-n-chip buffet of sorts (amongst other things) which has been in various tabloid newspapers in the last month or so.
  • davnicwil7 hours ago
    I was just thinking how it'd be great if there were newer, modern things like this that had sprung up in response to newer technologies.

    I guess it's one downside of dematerialisation with digital tech - I can't think of a single thing that would make sense. Everyone's got their own virtual portal to all the new technologies that come out, there's not much to look at out in the world.

    Maybe as more progress happens in physical 'world of atoms' type things we'll see a bit of this come back.

    • arximboldi7 hours ago
      As someone that tries to survive (every day more difficult) with just a dumbphone with me, I just fantasized about a parallel universe where all those kiosks still existed, and they were somehow like computer that you can briefly rent, to do the things people do with a smartphone. Perhaps you tap a card, and it picks your accounts, and you can quickly Whatsapp someone, check your email, call an Uber or use Google Maps (maybe even check hacker news, but with time limit?!)

      Maybe then many people would stop carrying their own portals, as you can briefly use the public ones for the one-off situation where you need it, but enjoy a portal-free mind the rest of the time. Also quite useful in case emergencies as it seems those portable-portals tend to run out of battery, or get lost or damaged...

      • xp846 hours ago
        There was a brief moment around the turn of the millennium where that was what some of us were expecting. I was in college just after that and there were some free Internet kiosks, which combined with the ubiquitous free-to-use computer labs on campus, did a pretty good job of making this type of lifestyle possible, to the extent you could store your important documents online (much harder though in a pre-Dropbox, pre-Google Docs world!). Or another thing that was a big trend then was Portable Apps. On a flash drive on your keychain, you'd have installs of apps that you needed, together with their data and whatever documents you might need.
        • wrs6 hours ago
          There was a brief period before that where some airports had pay phones with text terminals and modems built in, so you could dial up your corporate email or CompuServe. I swear I did not dream this.
          • 3 hours ago
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      • andrewlan hour ago
        “They have phones in booths now? Finally! I don’t have to lug this cell phone around.”

        Hermes Conrad, Futurama Season 6, Episode 6: Lethal Inspection

    • c7b6 hours ago
      Some suggestions:

      - Not sure what they're called, but I've seen a lot of fully automated outdoor "locker stations" for packet deliveries

      - Power bank "banks" or charging stations for smartphones in indoor spaces like malls

      - QR codes on stickers/ads in public spaces are a sort of bridge between the physical and digital worlds

      • HarHarVeryFunny5 hours ago
        In some Asian countries electric scooters with swappable battery packs are very common, and they have roadside battery swap stations where (for a subscription fee?) you can take a freshly charged battery and leave your old one. Seems like a great idea.
        • toyg2 hours ago
          Just went through Orlando airport and saw something called "power rod" that is basically that for small power banks: you drop your depleted bank and pick up a fully charged one. If I were a US-only traveller, I can see myself using it.
      • Jenk3 hours ago
        > - Not sure what they're called, but I've seen a lot of fully automated outdoor "locker stations" for packet deliveries

        Drop boxes!

        I was part of a team prototyping these some 20 years ago. I highly doubt we were the only team doing so, but we were certainly unaware of any commercially available/deployed stations at the time. I was writing the software, in particular the orchestration of the locks and event bus for the transmissions.

        Lots of fun from trying to fathom how undocumented solenoids operated, to trips to various countries for remote and environmental testing, and destructive tests simulating someone driving a truck into an installation (i.e., by deliberately driving a truck into one!)

        The nerdiest moment was taking a mainboard model that we were getting intermittent faults with and recreating the exact environmental conditions to recreate the problem. This involved incubating the mainboard in a sealed environment chamber to control temperature, humidity, and atmospheric pressure. The fault was bit-flipping because electrons were jumping rails when the microchip(s) were cold and damp.

    • Kaibeezy6 hours ago
      How about:

        - tap-to-pay paypoints
        - drive-under toll collection readers
        - signal-blocking phone pouches at concerts
        - anti-facial-recognition dazzle makeup
        - wireless chargers in the table at McDonald’s
      • doublerabbit5 hours ago

           - a tree that grows money
           - harmony between worlds
        
        If we are making lists. I'm still waiting for IRL Patch 2.0 and the fix for collision detection of eye lash to eye ball.
        • jagged-chisel29 minutes ago
          Maybe we’re not running the same system version, but I’m quite certain my eyelash to eyeball collision detection works great (and the alert can be anywhere from annoying to quite painful.)

          A collision prevention enhancement would be fabulous!

    • HarHarVeryFunny5 hours ago
      I don't know if they still exist, but for a while when pay phones were disappearing in the US, NYC converted a number of them into free WiFi access points.
    • robotresearcher6 hours ago
      Tesla Supercharger stations.
  • roebk6 hours ago
    I love seeing the occasional phone box in a quaint village which has been converted into a super compact library. It reminds me that community spirit and trust are alive.
    • riedel6 hours ago
      Actually here in Germany that the favourite use for our old yellow boxes, many have become book sharing hubs.
  • davedevelopment7 hours ago
    The ones in Hull are all cream coloured: https://www.thek6project.co.uk/2023/07/13/hull-university-ea...

    The crowns are also ground off I think

  • Self-Perfection4 hours ago
    Hopefully this database is integrated with OpenStreetMap.

    OSM has extensive tagging scheme for phone booths: https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Tag:amenity%3Dtelephone

  • iamalizard2 hours ago
    The connection has timed out

    The operation timed out when attempting to contact www.thek6project.co.uk.

  • alexfoo7 hours ago
    • ktallett5 hours ago
      Without even looking I assume this is the art installation in Kingston Upon Thames (a lovely town outside London, and next to Hampton Court). I remember this from childhood as I used to get my haircut opposite these phone boxes and regularly shopped with my nan at the Wilkinson's on the corner (an everything shop like a small Walmart).
      • n4r95 hours ago
        Wilkinson's is no longer there. Replaced by an arcade style venue called Urban Fun, I think.

        Many Kingstoners probably think of themselves as being in London. There's some graffiti on the way in to London on the A3 that says "Surrey not Surrey".

        • ktallett4 hours ago
          Guess that makes sense assuming the cinema is still round the corner.

          I miss the days of the CEX store when it sold import games just round the corner as well.

          Considering you have to travel through New Malden, Raynes Park (which for me is the border), and Norbiton to get to London, they would be wrong. I always assume many think like that as it potentially increases house prices but just having a TFL tap and go bus doesn't make somewhere London.

  • aussieguy12342 hours ago
    Here in Australia, public payphones, instead of being removed were all made free.

    They provide a lifeline to women fleeing domestic abuse, who need to contact services without their phone being tracked. Also to homeless and other vulnerable people who may not have access to a phone.

    Statistics show lots of calls to emergency services, centrelink (Australia's welfare agency) etc...

  • phyzix57617 hours ago
    Nice! Would be great if this had a map view as well.
  • dbbk5 hours ago
    Everywhere?
  • nailer7 hours ago
    There's one near the Houses of Parliament, tourists often shoot photos there, and are surprised when the inside is filled with stickers advertising prostitutes.

    https://maps.app.goo.gl/zLRxTFUXErcsrkCi7

    • muglug7 hours ago
      To be fair, that's the authentic London telephone box experience of old.
    • varispeed7 hours ago
      I think the actual experience was stepping into human poo, needles and overwhelming stench of piss and let's not go into why the telephone was sticky.
      • nephihaha6 hours ago
        Those are the urban ones. The ones in the countryside were useful sometimes if you were trying to get a taxi or a lift. They often had plants growing in them.
        • alexfoo5 hours ago
          And some were in very remote locations. The Nant y Maen phonebox in Wales springs to mind although I think it no longer has a working phone in it.
          • nephihaha5 hours ago
            Some of them were indeed. They were very handy in pre-mobile phone days for when your car broke down, or you had to contact someone.
  • indianbunghole2 hours ago
    [flagged]