GREENWOOD — If you read the number sequence "07734" and don’t think "Hello," there’s a good chance you never had to decode pager messages.
Pagers or beepers were the must-have item for Hoosier teens 25 years ago.
The communication device began as a business tool, but soon became a fashion statement for area teens allowing them to communicate via numeric messages.
Pagers allowed a recipient to be paged or alerted to call a specific number. A user would then return the page via a phone call.
The device gave parents a faster way to get in touch with their children.
“I had to beg to get it,” Sarah Fischer told former WRTV reporter Ben Morriston in March 1997.
However since early beepers weren’t capable of handling text, teens often resorted to pager-speak, communicating with numbers only. Teens wanted to keep some messages "007" or a secret.
Jim Anderson with Quality Cellular said teens were drawn to certain pager features.
“They like the colors, predominantly the colors are the big thing. They like the ones with 3 to 4 bell tones,” he said.
-
Lilly to invest additional $4.5 billion across Indiana manufacturing sites
Eli Lilly and Company announced Wednesday it will invest an additional $4.5 billion across two of its Lebanon sites.
Gray Brothers Cafeteria items hit auction block following Mooresville closure
Hundreds of items from the beloved Gray Brothers Cafeteria are going up for auction after the restaurant's 2025 closure.
Cooler Wednesday, warmer weekend ahead
Clouds stick around for the first part of the day today. Dry conditions for much of the day but look for cooler temperatures for the middle part of the work week.
1 dead, 1 critically injured in shooting at downtown gas station
One man died, and another is in critical condition following a shooting at a downtown gas station on Tuesday night, Indianapolis Metropolitan Police said.