Long distance was a pain in the butt as late as the 80s. Now I don’t usually even notice when I call someone across the country.
On a TV show a Chinese student in America got upset about something so called his dad in China. No more involved than calling across the street. And nobody noticed how amazing such a thing is.
So, yeah, I’m pretty sure phones are much easier to use than in his day.
indeed, which is what I think he meant......
..and local was pretty tuff as late as Andy, Barney and Sarah days...:)
In the late 1970's when I did two Med Sea deployments if we needed to call home to the states we had two choices. One was go to the ships HAM Radio operator {limited usually to emergencies only} and get a minute or two call through HAM Operators Patching it. The other was to either go to a USO or the port cities phone company office and sit and wait up to 8 plus hours. Been there done that LOL.
Now one thing I did manage to do in 1979 in Venice, Italy I could not do anywhere else was walk into a phone booth on the street and immediately get an overseas operator.
My cousin's son was on the USS George Washington in the second Iraq War. While in the Indian Ocean or anywhere at sea he could walk into the crews lounge on ship and call home on satellite phone. It cost a good sum per minute but the ability was there.
In the late 1940’s it used to take several hours to communicate with our relatives in the Midwest. One would tell the local operator the number wanted and they would tell you they would call you back when contact was established.