My friend Alexander testing his Prototype Telephone(Source: Wikipedia) |
That said, why would Alexander and even the people today waste saliva saying the whole "Testing testing one two" phrase into the said microphone or telephone instead of just saying "Testing" fullstop? Is there a purpose in saying "one two three"? Do numbers sound different from words? Have we progressed from nearly 200 years ago to the present time? And the most important question, did you even care about this hugely overused phrase? I bet you didn't. =D
Like I have said before, I feel that this phrase is way overused. Nearly everytime we see a microphone, we would hear the phrase. Why can't we be more creative? Perhaps when could sing a song or maybe be belt out the first 8 octaves simultanuously to at least keep people *like me* entertained instead of annoying them? It could even be a good way to perhaps test someone's hearing even like so:
By the way, I WANT A DIAMOND RING!!!(Source:worldofstock.com) |
Quite an interesting focus, though at this point, I'm not suer if you wish your readers to care or not about the things you write.
ReplyDeleteDo consider scannability.
The text that you chose to be link-texts are not appropriate - do relook those too.
Blogroll?
Do not use copyrighted images and cite sources. More original content, please.
Testing testing one two... Is my comment on? Anyway, it will be good if the font size be bigger.
ReplyDeleteinteresting topic, in the end it remains a question why they used that phrase though
ReplyDeletepersonally i think they should sing an octave for testing, both transmission quality and capability can be tested then