People are positioned and ready accordingly. Bill so part of that, the workers putting boxes and viles in freezer cases to be shipped across the country. The president calling it a modern day miracle. And Restaurant Owner Angela Marcon is here again. And first, be marc siegel with the vaccinations are underway. They continue. Doctor, how is it going . Bill, it was an honor to be invited into my Medical Center to witness this historic event. The trucks rolled as promised by general purna. Its v day. If first nurse here to be vaccinated, tara easter. I interviewed her. She said to me, you know, its an honor and she was shirks and side effects. Shes not worried about it. Shes going back to work tomorrow. Lets hear what she had to say about the vaccine. How do you feel about those that didnt make it this day to get the shot because it wasnt here . I think, you know, it was a very challenging time. Lots of patients and families went through a lot. Today is really exciting that we can move f
the average family home. cory practices her violin. christian plays with his cars. and mike and carol worry over the bills. we went into the 1980s in pretty much the same technology that s been in place for a couple of decades. typewriter. calculators, tv, oven. a car. you listen to music on a big old stereo system with a turntable. maybe you had a digital watch, and that was the only thing that was going to be digital that you actually owned. hello? i m not here now, but my faithful machine is. there was a handful of technology at that time. one was the telephone answering machine. you d be driving home and you d say, i can t wait to check my messages. you know, it had become part of the day. honey, i m checking my messages. from the noisy streets of new york to the laid-back tranquility of california, americans are tuning out and tuning in. when i think of technology in the 1980s, i think of the walkman. the walkman was huge. it s the latest fad. tiny st
and it was a threatening concept. the 1980s is a period of time when the big, impersonal, giant machine that lives in a huge air-conditioned room someplace suddenly becomes something that sits on your desk. something is happening out there, something that s expanding your world. small computers are happening. as soon as we have intelligent machines creeping into our daily lives, into our factories, into our hospitals, into our businesses, then it s going to be a new world out there. computer stores have become the neighborhood soda shops of the binary generation. the disciples, young and old, of smart machines. companies that were starting to build personal computers, companies like atari, tandy, commodore, apple began to see them as a home market. and it was starting to seep into the public consciousness. personal computers have become the business of at least 25 manufacturers, with three companies radio shack, apple, and commodore grabbing
in the early part of the 80s, the general image of the computer was always this giant machine with little things all over it. the mindset was the computer as the brain. and it was a threatening concept. the 1980s is a period of time when the big, impersonal, giant machine that lives in a huge, air-conditioned room someplace suddenly becomes something that sits on your desk. something is happening out there, something that s expanding your world. small computers are happening. as soon as we have intelligent machines creeping into our daily lives, into our factories, into our hospitals, into our businesses, then it s going to be a new world out there. computer stores have become the neighborhood soda shops of the binary generation. the disciples, young and old, of
machine with little things all over it. the mindset was the computer as the brain and it was a threatening concept. the 1980s is a period of time when the big impersonal giant machine that lives in a huge air-conditioned room someplace suddenly becomes something that sits on your desk. something is happening out there. something that s expanding your world. small computers are happening. as soon as we have intelligent machines creeping into our daily lives, into our factories, into our hospitals, into our businesses, then it s going to be a new world out there. computer stores have become the neighborhood soda shops of the binary generation. the disciples, young and old, of smart machines. companies that were starting