• 9 months ago
Ah yes, the 90s! Welcome to WatchMojo and today we’re counting down our picks for the top 10 awesome products from the 90s that you probably forgot existed.

Category

🗞
News
Transcript
00:00 Welcome to WatchMojo and today we're counting down our picks for the top 10 awesome products
00:07 from the 90s that you probably forgot existed.
00:17 Computers in the 90s were big, boxy, ugly things that had about as much sex appeal as
00:21 a washing machine.
00:22 But in true Apple form, the tech brand managed to reinvent it.
00:26 Released in 1998, the iMac was a sleek new innovation that looked to add fun in the form
00:30 of colours and modernity in the form of USB ports.
00:33 Some people rejected its shunning of legacy tech like floppy disk drives, while others
00:37 embraced the idea that being a computer geek could actually be quite fashionable.
00:41 If you had one, you were cool.
00:43 If your mum, dad or teacher had one, even they were cool.
00:46 True we've got better, slimmer computers nowadays, but you can't deny the allure
00:50 of the bulbous iMac.
00:55 It would be an understatement to say that "Home Alone 2" made this gadget what it
00:58 is, quite literally.
00:59 It was commissioned by writer John Hughes for the movie, and the one you see on screen
01:03 was actually built as a prop.
01:05 The company that made the device, Tiger Electronics, then got permission to make a version for
01:09 the retail market and boom, the rest is history.
01:12 The fun, voice-changing deluxe talkboy sparked creativity in kids all over the world, and
01:16 arguably peaked in the 1993 holiday season.
01:19 For some reason, recording and then slowing down or speeding up your voice is hilarious.
01:23 Who knew?
01:24 Well, John Hughes, that's who.
01:26 Howdy do.
01:31 Did anyone actually ever figure out how to properly take care of their digital pet?
01:36 The Tamagotchi took the world by storm in the mid-to-late 90s, and for many, it was
01:39 their first taste of responsibility.
01:41 It saw you caring for a digital bunny, dog, cat-like pet, who required feeding, potty
01:46 training and doting on whenever they became sick.
01:49 Many of us had them hanging on our keys, belts and bedside tables in order to nurture them,
01:54 while some of us got bored after half an hour and would then rediscover the lonely pet in
01:57 a drawer three years later.
01:59 Either way, they were iconic, and still are.
02:08 It's easy to laugh at these things now, but in 1996, these things were space age.
02:19 They were effectively the first proper handheld computer device, although in essence, they
02:23 were just a digitised notepad and planner, helping you record notes, contacts and calendar
02:27 events.
02:28 And you could even sync and connect them to your desktop.
02:31 Mind blown.
02:32 Various different Palm Pilots were released, but they ultimately became obsolete rather
02:36 quickly - reserved only for kids playing in their dad's office, or for companies to
02:39 give away as freebies when you signed up with them.
02:48 Kids are so desensitised to horror nowadays, but back in the 90s, the Goosebumps book series
02:53 was about as scary as it got, and it was amazing.
02:56 Not only were the books spooky, but they were accessible, and showed kids that ghosts and
03:00 monsters could be part of enthralling fiction, not just nightmare-inducing playground stories.
03:05 They are still publishing Goosebumps books and movies today, but there was something
03:09 magical about the original '92-97 run.
03:12 They filled bedroom bookshelves everywhere, with their vibrant artwork and strangely endearing
03:17 terror, and they tied in with the '95 TV series, which, if you remember it, was pretty
03:21 scary.
03:30 Ah yes, magic iBooks.
03:35 We all had one friend that could do it when we couldn't, or at least they claim to be
03:39 able to do it, right?
03:40 The magic iBook brought optical illusions to the living room, with their colourful images
03:44 actually called autostereograms, appearing 2D on paper, but becoming 3D if you looked
03:48 at them long enough and relaxed your eyes.
03:57 Seeing one of these for the first time was mind-boggling, and it had many of us reaching
04:01 out and trying to grab what wasn't there.
04:03 The magic iBook became a staple of home libraries, coffee tables and waiting rooms everywhere.
04:08 In fact, magic eye images have been used to treat people with vision disorders.
04:15 I personally tracked them down and put the links for them in the description below.
04:42 You can still buy these things today, but chances
04:51 are you're buying them to be quirky at a wedding or a party.
04:54 Back in the '90s, however, for many of us, it was simply how we captured memories at
04:58 home or on holiday.
04:59 You'd scroll a wheel and hear the clicking sound, take your limited number of shots,
05:03 and then go to have your photos developed.
05:10 No recharging, no reusing and absolutely no previewing, so you'd better make each shot
05:15 count.
05:16 By today's smartphone standards, they are absolutely impractical, but there's something
05:19 pure about only snapping the most important shots, instead of photographing every piece
05:24 of food before you eat it.
05:30 It's another '90s memory unlocker by Tiger Electronics, this one being the famous Hitclips,
05:35 the pocket-friendly audio player that will play one-minute samples of pop songs and make
05:38 you look like an absolute legend/loser while doing so.
05:43 Released just before the millennium, these things played mini keychain-like cartridges,
05:46 which sounded awful.
05:48 And you couldn't even adjust the volume either.
05:51 So you could have all of your favourite artists - Backstreet Boys, Britney Spears, NSYNC,
05:55 Destiny's Child - right there in your pocket.
05:57 Well, at least 60 seconds worth of them anyway.
06:00 This was before MP3 players, so the idea of Hitclips was pretty cool.
06:04 Until it wasn't.
06:05 But now it kind of is again, right?
06:18 The famed Reebok pumps were actually released in late 1989, but it wasn't until about
06:23 1991 that they started to become an absolute must-have for kids - and adults everywhere.
06:27 It's a shoe that uses an internal inflation mechanism to give the user a unique fit, and
06:32 arguably the strength, jumping power and dunking ability of Shaquille O'Neal.
06:36 Reebok pumps weren't just a marketing ploy however, they genuinely gave a more secure
06:40 fit around the ankle, which was great for sports like basketball.
06:43 Of course, the gimmick of getting pumped up was a big part of why they were so successful,
06:48 and they still are to this day.
07:17 Imagine being mid-conversation with a group of people when all of a sudden your belt starts
07:20 beeping and you have to rush off somewhere and save the day like Batman.
07:23 Well, that's how Pages made you feel.
07:26 They were a very early example of text messaging, allowing users to receive messages on the
07:30 go, either via a phone's keypad or via an operator.
07:33 In the 90s, it was the first taste of smartphone-like communication on the go, and it was favoured
07:38 by business types, doctors and high flyers everywhere.
07:41 Pages, or beepers as they were sometimes known, probably stuck around way longer than they
07:45 should have, but they were just so convenient and cool.
07:53 So which of these awesome 90s products gave you serious nostalgia?
07:56 Let us know in the comments section below.
08:10 Thanks for watching.
08:20 (upbeat music)