• @Willem
    link
    191 year ago

    You can still receive texts on a rotorary right, then it’s read aloud by some computer voice

      • @Willem
        link
        31 year ago

        As far as I know, no, rotary phones don’t use the nowadays default way of dial tones, so even numeric inputs in call menus don’t work

        • @AnUnusualRelic@lemmy.world
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          fedilink
          English
          21 year ago

          I don’t think you actually could use tones instead of pulse on a rotary phone.

          Well, technically you could, if you took everything out and replaced all the guts to send the right pulse based on the timing of the rotation, of course. Or if you put some kind of translator between it and the network.

          Rotary phones were fun because what they did was basically hang up shortly for each digit. So it was easy to dial a number just from the hook, even when there was one of those silly little padlocks on the dial.

          • @psud@aussie.zone
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            fedilink
            11 year ago

            You used to be able to get phone diallers, they had two purposes

            1. You could store your phone book on it, select a number, it’ll send the right tones out the speaker (you hold it against the mouthpiece)
            2. You could keep using a dial phone after they were no longer supported (by playing the tones down the mouthpiece)
      • @Willem
        link
        51 year ago

        It used to work at least here in the Netherlands, when you send a sms to a landline, the phone company has a tts service that reads texts like: “incoming text from zero six one… (etc) with the following text: ok boomer” and repeating that twice.

        Used to be a really mechanical voice, but I’ve not had a landline in at least ten years.