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Anarch157a | 8 months ago

It's such a versatile product. I bet everyone here who's older than 45/50 have at least once used a Bic pen to rewind a cassete tape.

I also used the plastic clip as a stapler remover.

There were many other uses for it, for sure.

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luismedel|8 months ago

The clip is also a superb stress-reliever by biting it :-)

cogogo|8 months ago

Never tried myself but I know they were used to defeat older U locks for bikes.

creaturemachine|8 months ago

For that job you needed one of the opaque round ones with a more flexible plastic. It had to friction fit over the centre of the keyway so it could deliver some torque as you were working the tumblers.

brunoarueira|8 months ago

I'm not that older, but I had learned this trick, mainly when the device goes wrong and we need to fix the tape :)

williamdclt|8 months ago

cassettes were still popular 20y ago, you can probably take 15y off your estimate!

ghc|8 months ago

At least in my area, cassettes were still popular 30 years ago during the transition to CDs, but by 20 years ago we were in the midst of the transition from CD to iPod. I don't remember seeing new tapes for sale anywhere after about 2000, and we were definitely burning CDs full of MP3s before then instead of making mixtapes. Personally, I bought my last cassette around 1995. Your point still stands, however...I think cutting 10-15y off the estimate would be reasonable.

baud147258|8 months ago

as 32 year old, I can confirm I used BIC pen (or similarly shaped pencils) to rewinds tapes.

QuercusMax|8 months ago

I always just used a pencil.

TeMPOraL|8 months ago

I usually had neither on me when needed, so I just used my pinkie.