PeterF wrote: Wed Jun 28, 2023 9:39 pm
Use ‘em to learn the code!
I assume the code is Morse Code.
Been there. Done that. Bought the t-shirt, too, but it doesn't fit anymore--not sure if I even have it anymore.
To get a certain badge, I had to learn "the code" in Cubs or Boy Scouts long ago, seemingly now in some distant galaxy. My cousin, who had also received the Morse Code badge and who had also received a pressed tin, Japanese-made, battery operated toy telegraph set for Christmas one year, would set it up between floors, at family gatherings, the connecting wires between key sets running down staircases, around corners, and so on (this long run-on sentence mimics the telegraph set setup). Then with groups of cousins on each end, we would, for our childish/puerile amusement, transmit rude/filthy jokes back and forth. Knock Knock jokes were generally the easiest, because they were short and somewhat predictable. We quickly learned to avoid the long, convoluted, tedious
groaner campfire-story jokes.
I have had no occasion in the very long stretch of my life since to use Morse Code.
Especially for the occasion and in the spirit of nostalgia, I have concocted a bad but clean joke.
-.- -. --- -.-. -.- -.- -. --- -.-. -.- .-.-.- .-- .... --- .----. ... - .... . .-. . ..--.. --. .-. .- -. -.. -- .- .-.-.- --. .-. .- -.. -- .- .-- .... --- ..--.. --. .-. .- -. -.. -- .- .--. .... --- -. . -.-.--
Secret Decoder Ring Here:
https://www.morsetranslator.com
As for the Marconi-Victor disks .... they are seemingly useless as instructional materials without the paper manuals that presumably went with them. Historical curiosities only.
