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Executive Summary for www.paleotechnologist.net

779 Response Time (ms)
200 HTTP Status
21 Scripts
11 Images
10 Links
HTTP/1.1 Protocol

SEO & Content Analysis

Basic Information
Page Title
The Paleotechnologist | Modern Fun With Old-School Tech
Meta Description
Not detected
HTML Language
en-US
Robots.txt Present
Sitemap Not found
SEO Meta Tags
content-type: text/html; charset=UTF-8
Page Content

The Paleotechnologist | Modern Fun With Old-School Tech

A twin pack of eight-shot FlipFlash arrays.(You got four flashes per side, then flipped it over to use the other four.)Taking pictures used to cost actual money. Even today, you do still need a camera — but we all have smartphones with us anyway. Back in the day, you not only needed the camera, but needed to buy film and then either have it processed (for more money) or process it yourself in a home darkroom (which cost a lot of money to set up and then more for the materials.) Most people paid to have the pictures developed — FotoMat huts were a common sight in shopping center parking lots. Polaroid pictures were self-developing, but also more expensive and couldn’t be used for slides.Even the lighting was often consumable. You could usually take daylight pictures outdoors using ambient light, but taking pictures indoors usually needed extra light. Professional photographers would lug around large umbrella lights with xenon strobe bulbs and exotic chargers that whined after every flash. The consumer option was a lot more convenient — but a lot more expensive per shot, over time. A multiple-shot flash cartridge was designed, where a stored electrical charge from the camera would trigger a controlled explosive reaction between fine zirconium wire and a pure oxygen environment, resulting in a brief, bright flash of light.The reaction consumed the filament and oxygen, ruining the bulb, but the genius idea was to harness the heat from this reaction to sever the connection to the currently-firing bulb, and also to enable the connection to the next bulb in the chain, so it would fire with the next picture taken. Although each individual bulb was single-use, you could take four (or five) pictures in a row, and then flip the flash cartridge over (thus the name) to use the others. Most FlipFlash cartridges came with colored dots on the back to indicate how many flashes remained.Photo shops (and most drug stores and many grocery stores) sold these consumable flash cartridges — either the older Flash Cube style or Kodak’s Flip Flash, used on the 126 Instamatic and other cameras. For a few bucks, you could get a two-pack of flash cartridges, good for a total of sixteen flashes (not counting the occasional fairly rare misfire). That’s twenty cents per shot, in 1980s-era money, just to light up the shot. ($3.33 would buy lunch, back then.)When I got my first digital camera in 1997, I calculated that it was roughly 600 times less expensive to take digital pictures and then burn them to a CD-R for storage, back then. The resolution back then didn’t compete with film — but it does, now.Removing all effective cost per picture taken (as well the new ones being in digital form from the start) has not only allowed the explosion of multimedia social sites like Instagram and Facebook — it is a profound new tool to understand, record, and document our world. When students want a record of lab activities to include in the report, they simply take a picture and think nothing of it. 1980 would be amazed at how easy and inexpensive modern photography is.;

Network & Infrastructure

DNS & Hosting
IP Address
192.254.184.119
Reverse DNS
192-254-184-119.unifiedlayer.com
SSL/TLS Certificate
Issuer
CN=R13, O=Let's Encrypt, C=US
Protocol Tls13
Expires In 35 days

Technology Stack

Content Management Systems
WordPress
JavaScript Frameworks
jQuery React
Build Tools
Vite
Server Technologies
Generator: WordPress 6.9 PHP (inferred from WordPress)

Services & Integrations

Analytics & Tracking
Google Analytics GA4 Google Tag Manager
E-commerce Platforms
Magento PrestaShop
Payment Gateways
PayPal

CDN & Media Providers

Media Providers
YouTube

Dynamic Analysis & Security

Dynamic JavaScript Analysis
Angular (CDN Detection) Bootstrap (CSS Classes) ES6+ JavaScript Features Google Analytics (Script Analysis) Google Tag Manager (Script Analysis) Hotjar (Script Analysis) jQuery (CDN Detection) jQuery (Script Analysis) jQuery (script Resource) React (CDN Detection) Web Server: Apache
Server Headers
nginx/1.25.5

Resource Analysis

External Resource Hosts
gmpg.org
www.datasheets360.com
www.googletagmanager.com
www.paleotechnologist.net
www.paypalobjects.com
UI Frameworks & Libraries
Angular Material (Class Names) Bootstrap (Class Names) Slate Vuetify (Class Names)
Analysis Complete

Analyzed www.paleotechnologist.net with 6 technologies detected across 8 categories

Analysis completed in 779 ms • 2026-03-23 09:31:29 UTC