Even less than a 150 years ago that would have been impossible. And prior to that communication among normal people could take months.

  • saimen@feddit.org
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    12 hours ago

    I remember calling someone in another country was super expensive but you could predial some super long numbers which made it cheaper somehow

    • Lol before smartphones became ubiquitious, my parents went to these stores to buy these weird pre-paid long-distance phone cards to relatives in China because in this era, minutes were still limited and data plans were expensive af.

      Like you’d dial a local number in the US then you’d use the phone’s numpad to enter your destination number they’d call your desired number for you then connect you…

      Idk how that worked

      I saw them being sold anywhere from $10 to $50 with varying minutes

      It’s kinda like a gift card. You scratch off a number in the back and that’s your access code, then you just call the number corresponding to your region.

      Some phone cards were so scummy and they deducted your minutes while its waiting before it even gets connected. Or just calling to check minutes, and they deduct your minutes for that call before you actually make the long distance call. So you’d have to shop around in different stores to hope their phone cards are less scummy.

      Ever since 2014/2015 they got actual smartphones and then just started using WeChat. Free calls and video calls over the internet. And now mobile data is unlimited (and actually affordable compared to before).

      But problem is… now CCP is listening in the livingroom… 👀 (cuz they use voice memo instead of typing… so WeChat gets permanent access to the microphone permission…)

      • bandwidthcrisis@lemmy.world
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        6 hours ago

        I used those to call back to the UK when I moved to the US, back around 2005.

        When you entered the number you wanted to call, it would do a VOIP connection from the line you were on to that company to a line in the destination county. So it was an Internet call for the international part (which is how they did it cheaply).

        I realized that because the cards I bought were from a company with “VOIP” in the name!

        I had one of those Radio Shack tone dialler boxes so that I could pre-program the free US number and the card id number.