2600 mag declares the payphone dead
  • 3 Comments
by Nicholas Deleon on April 14, 2008

2600spr08

2600, the Hacker Quarterly, has declared this year, 2008, to be the payphone’s last year. The payphone is dead, long live the payphone.

The cover of the publication’s Spring issue has what looks to be a shrine dedicated to the memory of payphone; a picture of Alexander Graham Bell adorns the top of the shrine. 1889-2008. Never forget.

But is the payphone dead, really? AT&T sold all of its remaining payphones late last year, and here in New York, Verizon payphones are a rare sight. You’ll occasionally spot one on the street and say to yourself, “Oh, yeah, I remember those.” That they’re filled with half-empty beer bottles and, shall we say, human-generated prizes, is an unfortunate circumstance.

You’ll still find payphones in the subways here, which makes sense—with no (or limited) cellphone reception underground, you’d want a reliable way to contact people outside of the subway system in the even of an emergency. We’ll see how long those payphones last if and when cellphone service is introduced to the underground.

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  • Bisbee Jones-Magee - April 14th, 2008 at 11:21 pm GMT+5

    Kudos to 2600 for telling it like it is. Most payphones handsets are coated with e.coli anyway. Who needs ‘em.

  • what are you talking about? there are Verizon and other payphones at every freakin’ street corner in new york. Verizon has publicly stated that they make a good business off those phones. do some freakin’ research

  • maybe Verizon should do some research!!!!!! who even knows how to use a public phone anymore?!!!

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