When the first newfangled colour TV you saw was at a technology show, it was just displaying 'coloured snow', and it seemed amaaaazing.
Also seeing a 'music video' on B&W TV, perhaps one of the very first music videos, and realizing you were watching the birth of a new art form. I was then a young teenager or pre-teen - can't quite recall. Nor have I ever been able to find a copy of that clip anywhere on the net. Wish I could.
When as a small child you'd walk 2/3 of a mile to school and back every school day, alone, and that was perfectly normal and safe. Also that the school playground merged into bushland and you weren't supposed to wander off into it during lunch break but there was nothing stopping you. And I often did.
When as a small child your home had a fireplace in the living room, in which was burned coal and coke to keep warm in winter. With a fun childhood activity being melting scap lead in tin cans on that fireplace and casting lead shapes in sand.
When your first electronics learning kit (Phillips EE) contained germanium transistors. And that was great because prior to that all the electronics you'd scavenged from the local tip (which nobody minded a kid roaming about in) was valve-based.
When you've hated Rap music since it appeared a looong time ago, but now some of it has come full circle and you discover it's become as curmudgeonly dismissive of current social trends as you feel. So it's actually fun.
Francis Aaron – Boys Will Be Girls
Francis Aaron – Problematic
Tom MacDonald - Snowflakes
Tom MacDonald - Clown World
Tom MacDonald - People So Stupid
Tom MacDonald - Fake Woke
The first BW TV I ever saw was on display in Fremantle, around 1957 or so, fed with video & sound from a Telecine chain.
Perth didn't get broadcast TV till 1959, when TVW7 started transmissions.
The first colour TVs I saw were on a visit to the UK in 1971.
Back home, in 1974/75, I was involved in the modification of ABW2's 1959 vintage transmitters for colour.
We didn't have any colour test equipment at first, so were forced to make do.
Among other things, the transmitters needed to be tested for "differential gain".
To do this, you need a sawtooth or stairstep signal with colour carrier frequency impressed upon it.
We did it by using 4.433MHz, "give or take" from a Wayne Kerr signal generator fed into a Fernseh PGM75, which had the facility to add an externally sourced signal to its sawtooth video output.
It worked OK, so the Wayne Kerr was mounted in the rack under the video patchfield for convenience.
All was sweet, till we started getting reports of viewers who had bought a particular brand of colour TV for the big day, seeing random patches & swirls of colour across their BW picture.
It turns out the 4.433MHz from the generator was leaking into the jackfield above, & the low level signal was enough to deactivate the "colour killer" circuit on HMV TVs.