Many of them lasted longer than we then expected, but their time is coming. Here's the list, and the current status ... (items with an * were added after the original post, thanks to my readers for ideas!)
- pay phones: almost gone
- fax machines: still here, but I rarely get a fax any more. I do send them on occasion.
- newsprint: going away
- the telegraph: gone
- home phones: going
- metered phone calls - esp. long distance: still around, maybe starting to go
- graduate school: we still have them, but there are many more distance programs. Post-secondary education seems overdue for an upheaval. It's fantastically expensive.
- letters: these are really going away. I never get anything at the office. At home I'm down to checks, weddings and funerals.
- encyclopedias (home, printed): I think they're largely gone, but I do miss them.
- modems* (see fax): We were sure these would be gone by 1999. They're still used by millions of Americans. I think they'll be gone within five years, but ...
- analog broadcast standard resolution TV*: We expected TVs to change much faster than they have. So we expected resolution/display convergence (same hi res for TV and computer) and we had a fuzzier set of ideas about technology convergence. Instead the standard TV has hung on. If not for the forced transition to digital signals I think they might have lasted another ten years. So a remarkable slow transition.