@@user-and-id it was the old clicking phone when you had to click 3 times on the number 2 to get a letter C you probably meant the four symbols (-.-.) to get a C
@@hairyputter5363 My point is that if you put someone who is actually good at typing on a phone against someone using morse code, the person on the phone would probably win.
the morse code translates to: Ok, hear me out. So it's about this guy named Rick. He's a scientist that turns himself into a pickle. Funniest shit I've ever seen. They call him Pickle Rick.
sms guy: „I‘ll be there at 8“ morse guy: „You too should fear the time that slowely but surely leads us all towards an inevitable death and if it’s sooner or later will take most likely what we love most even if we hold on to it as tightly as we can. And when your time finally comes to leave this world you will look back and wonder what it is that you leave behind and what it is that will make you be remembered or if you will just become a vague shadow in the minds of those who follow after you and they will walk past your grave without knowing you and you will only exist for the extension of a moment when they read the rotting letters that once were your name on your tombstone while they walk past to visit their loved ones. And the wind blows cold over the field behind the graveyard when there is no time left for you to think about what you could have changed and no time is left to think about how all that keeps you from being forgotten forever like you never even existed are a couple of words slowly fading on an old stone covered with yellow leafes falling from the trees around you.“
"Did you ever hear the tragedy of Darth Plagueis The Wise? I thought not. It's not a story the Jedi would tell you. It's a Sith legend. Darth Plagueis was a Dark Lord of the Sith, so powerful and so wise he could use the Force to influence the midichlorians to create life… He had such a knowledge of the dark side that he could even keep the ones he cared about from dying. The dark side of the Force is a pathway to many abilities some consider to be unnatural. He became so powerful… the only thing he was afraid of was losing his power, which eventually, of course, he did. Unfortunately, he taught his apprentice everything he knew, then his apprentice killed him in his sleep. Ironic. He could save others from death, but not himself."
Morse code was designed for speed: the most common letters are made of the shortest possible symbols and the less frequent letters are only then assigned the remaining longer permutations of dits and dahs (through a dichotomic search table). A practiced coder could get reasonably fast. Old fashioned texting is not designed primarily for speed but convenience of use without special training. Many of the most common letters in the English language required two presses (e.g. E, N, U), some three (I, R, O) and some even four, like S. If the next letter belonged to the same key you also had to wait a moment before attempting to input the next letter.
I don't agree the statement that morse code was made for speed. Having in sight that most people , tx with an speed of sround 15-20wpm because most of the people cant understand faster than 20-25wpm. Maybe back in the day when it was used a ton , most of the people were able to receive faster than even 30-40wpm
@@Fera-gr5mm if it has physical key it's possible. But considering how small the button is you won't be able to type like in fullsized keyboard, and you might need to find the homerow button several times
In the early days of the internet there was a similar experiment to transfer 1MB of data between Paris and London. One team used state of the art network equipment and the other taped an SDcard to the leg of a carrier pigeon. The pigeon won.
There was a project at my old company that ended up taking a whole day and night to complete the transfer while knocking out everyone's connections and it would have been faster to just overnight ship the data on blurays.
Not just the early days of the internet. The same thing is still true today and will be for the foreseeable future. Not with 1MB, admitted. Never underestimate the bandwidth of a station wagon full of tapes hurtling down the highway. -Andrew Tanenbaum, 1981 Also see: what-if.xkcd.com/31 and en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sneakernet
I studied morse code for 6 years and here's what it translates to... "Benny, I ain't never seen 2 pretty best friends, always one of them gotta be ugly"
that would be SSTV. it's basically a single frame b/w or color low res image transmitted using normal voice mode radios wired into computers or phones running SSTV image enc/dec software.
@Benjamin - SO EFFIN WHAT?????? The contest was about who could send and receive the FASTEST, you MORON - not who deserved a prize because he was "really doing his best"! FCUKWIT.
For those interested in the comparison, the teenager is Ben Cook, who Leno describes in the full clip as 'the fastest text messenger in the country.' [1] According to NBC News, he briefly held a world record for text messaging and once texted 'a 160-character standardized message in 42.22 seconds' in a text-off competition. [2] On the other side, Chip Margelli used his 43 years experience as a ham radio operator to send the message to Ken Miller, who has 38 years experience with morse code. So these aren't just some random people being thrown together, as some have asserted--both groups are adept in their skill. However, the morse code pair does have the benefit of decades of experience, as well as being able to actually hear the message being sent in real time. As the Spokesman-Review puts it [3], 'Miller didn’t read the dots and dashes, he listened to the sound of the code the way you would listen to a foreign language.' [1] www.dailymotion.com/video/x36422 [2] www.nbcnews.com/id/wbna14121680 [3] www.spokesman.com/stories/2005/jun/13/morse-code-vs-texting-guess-whos-faster/
The difference is, in SMS you would write the whole message and then send it, but in morse, you would partially receive the message, writing it down at the same time the other end is sending it, meaning, you could have half the message that was meant to be (in case of an emergency), but at least it would be half sent, and not blank coversation
Unless if you have a computer linked to your tranceiver. It's different, and with a little knoweldge you can do some thousands of kilometers with an incredible rate of correct letter. That's mostly what HAM member do.
The first part of the message is “I just saved a bunch…” then the audio cuts and I can hear “car insurance.” It’s hard to hear the rest over the yelling. I’m guessing the message is a GEICO ad lol I can’t decipher Morse at that speed very well, but I slowed it down and that’s all I could make out
I'm way late to this post. As long as others learn it, it will never die. Without ham licensing requiring a Morse code test, fewer will learn it. Although, as a ham radio licensee, I haven't transmitted code in 45 years, I still know it. I even created Morse code notifications for my phone. That allows me to know who is texting me, when I have a calendar notification and many others. Yeah, I'm a nerd.
@@sdoddsma the thing is that morse code is so cool by itself that it's bound to attract someone at some point, like, it will never die, it's handy for some things.
I remember this. The winner read, "I just saved a bunch of money on my car insurance". I tried looking for the video to link it here but it's not available on TH-cam.
That’s a whole lot impressive when you renege that actual range of wireless Marconi operations and how long it took for the cabled version to actually travel across the ocean...
If anyone is wondering what was the message, here it is: We're no strangers to love You know the rules and so do I A full commitment's what I'm thinking of You wouldn't get this from any other guy I just wanna tell you how I'm feeling Gotta make you understand Never gonna give you up Never gonna let you down Never gonna run around and desert you Never gonna make you cry Never gonna say goodbye Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you We've known each other for so long Your heart's been aching but you're too shy to say it Inside we both know what's been going on We know the game and we're gonna play it And if you ask me how I'm feeling Don't tell me you're too blind to see Never gonna give you up Never gonna let you down Never gonna run around and desert you Never gonna make you cry Never gonna say goodbye Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you No, I'm never gonna give you up No, I'm never gonna let you down No, I'll never run around and hurt you Never, ever desert you We've known each other for so long Your heart's been aching but Never gonna give you up Never gonna let you down Never gonna run around and desert you Never gonna make you cry Never gonna say goodbye Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you No, I'm never gonna give you up No, I'm never gonna let you down No, I'll never run around and hurt you I'll never, ever desert you _yes._
BUT, once you memorize the num pad comepletelly? You can text WITHOUT looking at your phone just like you were breathing which is very handing for text and drive and even in the classroom without the teacher taking your when they caught you looking down
@@Phantom9587 yea kinda like typing on a computer keyboard. i only have to look once or twice to look where my hands are placed so i don't start typing gibberish(typing the letter next to the letter i wanted to type out instead)
I remember watching this on Leno when it aired. From memory, the message was a current Geico commercial slogan. (I forgot the actual commercial slogan) but was something like: “You won’t believe, but I just save a lot on my car insurance” (so there was a good chance that the receiving old-tymey Morse code guy, could of figured out the message, half way though the message. - Anyway, I was happy he won, because back then, I thought the whole 10 keypad texting, was totally pathetic.
A good Morse operator is scary fast. You need a good texter to beat them. Also for it to be a fair contest the texter should use only one finger/thumb.
To be fair, texting for atleast a month with an old nokia 3310, you will probably get used to it faster than studying morse code which i pressumed would take years to atleast get good, not to mention become that fast.
@@jaysrandomvideos9483 It doesnt take years really. Learning it will take ye a few hours. Mastering the same speed rate as in the video will maybe take a few months
It begins " I just saved a bunch...", I can't get the rest because people start cheering. To get even that I had to slow the video down a bit. That guy is pretty fast.
If you think the SMS was slow, then you should’ve seen the blonde in her twenties going below the speed limit in the passing lane this morning. I should add that she was in a Toyota Yaris with pride stickers all over it. Textbook 😂
Getting two experts in morse code and two teenagers, and this is old when phones keyboard were small so you have to press a key multiple times to get a specific letter, i think with more modern phones it would be such an easy win sadly they didn't exist yet.
The message says"I just saved a bunch of money on my car insurance." No joke that's the real message they sended However the cip was cut and isn't complete
Military operators who sent encrypted sets of five letters in a group routinely sent and received at 50 WPM. Morse operators can be much much faster than texting.
Morse guy: raise your hand first
Morse guy 2: *raise hand*
Underrated comment
underrated
Underrated
Lmao hahahha
Sms guy: "let them win"
Sms guy 2: "aight"
i mean, it did take 3 buttons to type the letter c
I mean, isn't that 4 buttons?
@@user-and-id it was the old clicking phone when you had to click 3 times on the number 2 to get a letter C
you probably meant the four symbols (-.-.) to get a C
@@TheStigi98 oh, yea I thought he means morse code
Wasnt there alreadt t9 dictionary? U dont need to click '2' three times to get letter C.
-.-.
ONLY if both sides of the conversation can read at that speed
Obvious stupid
Damn I thought it worked if the other side can't read morse at all
Yes they can
Can't read at 20WPM?
Exactly
morse guy: send the nukes.
morse guy 2: copy.
Morse guy: nudes*
Morse guy 2: ...
Copy
666 :>
Saved the day.. 667
QSL*
hail hydra
Ah yes, lets pit someone who's really good at morse code against some random teenager we pulled off the street
only few know morse code but typing nowadays is much faster
Well because no random teenager knows how morse code works
@@hairyputter5363 My point is that if you put someone who is actually good at typing on a phone against someone using morse code, the person on the phone would probably win.
@@archietheproto7706
I agree
@@archietheproto7706 especially with now days touchscreens keyboards instead of the 3x4 nail breaking buttons
the morse code translates to: Ok, hear me out. So it's about this guy named Rick. He's a scientist that turns himself into a pickle. Funniest shit I've ever seen. They call him Pickle Rick.
Change of Tempo shit*
crazybird yes
Change of Tempo you got me in the first half
Woe cool dude
Fuck you
Morse Vs SMS Vs shouting to the other guys
Who would win?
Third one just because everyone else would laugh their asses off at the moment the first word comes out of that guys mouth
Ok but your 2 miles apart who would win now?
@@ragtag369_ depends how good u can shout
@@felixpettersson9367 Bruh your reply killed me lol, take a like
Morse
The message translates to:
“Idc what the message sais just raise ur hand”
THIS 🤣🤣🤣
They don't know how to spell in morse code?
@@Bystronicman08 what do you mean?
@@Dutch_G it's says not sais
@@aleksasavic7954 lmao i was wondering why sais whas like underlined in red. But as you could have read by my name english is not my native language
This was done again a few years ago using a newer phone (flip-phone being used in this video was a joke). Using a "modern" cell phone, CW got smoked.
Texting can't beat Morse code, 73s
swipe to type: are you challenging me?
Lakree I’m pretty sure it’s called glide typing or something
@@inzanity7001 the first keyboard that had the swipe feature was literally called "swype"
@@umbreon22222 lol
“They’re starting to annoy me. Take them out.”
w2q w 1w21 -2
Nuke sent.
😂
sms guy: „I‘ll be there at 8“
morse guy: „You too should fear the time that slowely but surely leads us all towards an inevitable death and if it’s sooner or later will take most likely what we love most even if we hold on to it as tightly as we can. And when your time finally comes to leave this world you will look back and wonder what it is that you leave behind and what it is that will make you be remembered or if you will just become a vague shadow in the minds of those who follow after you and they will walk past your grave without knowing you and you will only exist for the extension of a moment when they read the rotting letters that once were your name on your tombstone while they walk past to visit their loved ones. And the wind blows cold over the field behind the graveyard when there is no time left for you to think about what you could have changed and no time is left to think about how all that keeps you from being forgotten forever like you never even existed are a couple of words slowly fading on an old stone covered with yellow leafes falling from the trees around you.“
No need to remind me of death every 2 seconds man.
@@darian2975 agreed
Shakespeare
"Did you ever hear the tragedy of Darth Plagueis The Wise? I thought not. It's not a story the Jedi would tell you. It's a Sith legend. Darth Plagueis was a Dark Lord of the Sith, so powerful and so wise he could use the Force to influence the midichlorians to create life… He had such a knowledge of the dark side that he could even keep the ones he cared about from dying. The dark side of the Force is a pathway to many abilities some consider to be unnatural. He became so powerful… the only thing he was afraid of was losing his power, which eventually, of course, he did. Unfortunately, he taught his apprentice everything he knew, then his apprentice killed him in his sleep. Ironic. He could save others from death, but not himself."
Morse code was designed for speed: the most common letters are made of the shortest possible symbols and the less frequent letters are only then assigned the remaining longer permutations of dits and dahs (through a dichotomic search table). A practiced coder could get reasonably fast.
Old fashioned texting is not designed primarily for speed but convenience of use without special training. Many of the most common letters in the English language required two presses (e.g. E, N, U), some three (I, R, O) and some even four, like S. If the next letter belonged to the same key you also had to wait a moment before attempting to input the next letter.
Um, "S" is only THREE characters : dit dit dit
I don't agree the statement that morse code was made for speed.
Having in sight that most people , tx with an speed of sround 15-20wpm because most of the people cant understand faster than 20-25wpm.
Maybe back in the day when it was used a ton , most of the people were able to receive faster than even 30-40wpm
@@usernamemykel true, the four one is H
@@limpyu_600 Agreed. N4ANO 73
I used to single-press the D-pad right to skip that wait
Parents to the children: All you do is text people. Why not try an ol' fashioned phone call for once?
Telegraphers: Am I a joke to you?
Because of this now phones have a full keyboard instead of 3-4 letters per key :v
The phone that have 3-4 letters per key is the strongest phone ever
You know what phone I mean😅
The disadvantage is that it's impossible to type something without seeing it
@@Fera-gr5mm if it has physical key it's possible. But considering how small the button is you won't be able to type like in fullsized keyboard, and you might need to find the homerow button several times
Must be some young children...none of you know whats up with t9....being able to text without looking 😎
@@smythe7480 t9 was a massive step up
In the early days of the internet there was a similar experiment to transfer 1MB of data between Paris and London. One team used state of the art network equipment and the other taped an SDcard to the leg of a carrier pigeon. The pigeon won.
Bruh this is so underrated, just letting you know this killed me laughing
There was a project at my old company that ended up taking a whole day and night to complete the transfer while knocking out everyone's connections and it would have been faster to just overnight ship the data on blurays.
Oh, 100%. That's throughput vs Latency right there
Not just the early days of the internet. The same thing is still true today and will be for the foreseeable future. Not with 1MB, admitted.
Never underestimate the bandwidth of a station wagon full of tapes hurtling down the highway.
-Andrew Tanenbaum, 1981
Also see: what-if.xkcd.com/31 and en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sneakernet
Training pigeons is expensive man.
Morse Code:
"Training for many years makes you efficient"
SMS:
"You guys get trained?"
I studied morse code for 6 years and here's what it translates to...
"Benny, I ain't never seen 2 pretty best friends, always one of them gotta be ugly"
you lie
@Shortwaver 101 both if you, take a fucking joke
R/woooosh 1000
@Shortwaver 101 that would be what us professionals call the "setup". Do look out for it next time, you'll be amazed
If your best friend is not ugly then guess what
During the race while the people were “cheering”(yelling) i was like in my mind, stfu you’re messing with the morse code receiver’s concentration.
Nah these people had so much going on around them where they worked
everybody gangsta untill the boy took a photo and send it to his partner😂
that would be SSTV. it's basically a single frame b/w or color low res image transmitted using normal voice mode radios wired into computers or phones running SSTV image enc/dec software.
Wired photo
The guy waiting for the text message was really doing his best, they should've won. Smh
@Benjamin - SO EFFIN WHAT??????
The contest was about who could send and receive the FASTEST, you MORON - not who deserved a prize because he was "really doing his best"!
FCUKWIT.
Imagine cheating on a test just by tapping on the desk
"Was not an impostor"
😂😂😂
Haha
Boomers VS. Millennials
But the boomers are good and the millennials are bad.
@@arfansthename almost like the boomers had practice, and the millennials had casual use..
@@thirdnebula1823 you mean writing sms was never a job? Damn
@@arfansthename I bet your mom is a millenial.
@@ulfmusskacken Depends on the type of work but most likely they were (and are) wrote by a computer program.
Plot twist : that grandpa actually rise his hand for some water.
0:15 flip phone friend is literally just sitting there, waiting
I'm glad they wore their "morse code guys" uniform so I didn't confuse them with those guys t9 texting each other
For those interested in the comparison, the teenager is Ben Cook, who Leno describes in the full clip as 'the fastest text messenger in the country.' [1] According to NBC News, he briefly held a world record for text messaging and once texted 'a 160-character standardized message in 42.22 seconds' in a text-off competition. [2] On the other side, Chip Margelli used his 43 years experience as a ham radio operator to send the message to Ken Miller, who has 38 years experience with morse code.
So these aren't just some random people being thrown together, as some have asserted--both groups are adept in their skill. However, the morse code pair does have the benefit of decades of experience, as well as being able to actually hear the message being sent in real time. As the Spokesman-Review puts it [3], 'Miller didn’t read the dots and dashes, he listened to the sound of the code the way you would listen to a foreign language.'
[1] www.dailymotion.com/video/x36422
[2] www.nbcnews.com/id/wbna14121680
[3] www.spokesman.com/stories/2005/jun/13/morse-code-vs-texting-guess-whos-faster/
FACT ! These were contest winners ! Not just random participants.
@F8BBL pin this message.
lmfao, WORLD RECORD for typing 40 WPM. you've gotta be shitting me dude
@@mika_iranit's old video, and yes phone back in the day still move 1 digit per button
_I like how the dude has a bow tie and a green visor!_
_This is serious business!!_
Well that settles it. I'm buying a Morse code machine for me and my family next christmas. That morse code ringtone too though.
The difference is, in SMS you would write the whole message and then send it, but in morse, you would partially receive the message, writing it down at the same time the other end is sending it, meaning, you could have half the message that was meant to be (in case of an emergency), but at least it would be half sent, and not blank coversation
Unless if you have a computer linked to your tranceiver.
It's different, and with a little knoweldge you can do some thousands of kilometers with an incredible rate of correct letter.
That's mostly what HAM member do.
I just saved a lot of money on my car insurance, too.
So this is what they were saying?
@@minibelt3222 Yup. "I JUST SAVED A BUNCH ON CAR INSURANCE"
Real keyboard: don't mind my 1000 characters per minute
Mnemonic Deluge
voice is a joke to you ?
The first part of the message is “I just saved a bunch…” then the audio cuts and I can hear “car insurance.” It’s hard to hear the rest over the yelling. I’m guessing the message is a GEICO ad lol
I can’t decipher Morse at that speed very well, but I slowed it down and that’s all I could make out
I really hope Morse Code never dies
I really hope it does.
@@shaunnil8248 it never will unless all of society dies
I'm way late to this post. As long as others learn it, it will never die. Without ham licensing requiring a Morse code test, fewer will learn it. Although, as a ham radio licensee, I haven't transmitted code in 45 years, I still know it. I even created Morse code notifications for my phone. That allows me to know who is texting me, when I have a calendar notification and many others. Yeah, I'm a nerd.
@@sdoddsma the thing is that morse code is so cool by itself that it's bound to attract someone at some point, like, it will never die, it's handy for some things.
Its not hard to learn the morse code.
It never gonna die because we documented the morse alphabet
Morse guy 1: _If you happy and you know it raise you hand_
Morse guy 2:
I remember this. The winner read, "I just saved a bunch of money on my car insurance". I tried looking for the video to link it here but it's not available on TH-cam.
I was able to make out the "saved a bunch" and a text search found your comment with the rest of the text. Cheers!
2020
Predictive typing : let me introduce my..
Morse guy : wait.. what..?
That’s a whole lot impressive when you renege that actual range of wireless Marconi operations and how long it took for the cabled version to actually travel across the ocean...
Everybody gansta until morse code grandpa shows up
And the best part, no third party.
Your equipment, your message.
Hello there, people who got this in the recommendation after 5 years
General Kenobi
Hi
Cool. Now get the morse code guy to do that on a moving bus.
They did it in trenches. It is certainly possible
They did it in tanks and airplanes under full bombardment. Why do you suspect they couldn´t do it in a moving bus? :-D
@@Kawka1122 Trenches moved?
@@whatevernamegoeshere3644 Under the constant bombardment of german heavy artillery they sure bloody moved.
@@fernwehn5925 i know my joke was bad but at least acknowledge it lmao
Should re do this now cause you don't have to press a button at most 3 times to get letter
If anyone is wondering what was the message, here it is:
We're no strangers to love
You know the rules and so do I
A full commitment's what I'm thinking of
You wouldn't get this from any other guy
I just wanna tell you how I'm feeling
Gotta make you understand
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you
We've known each other for so long
Your heart's been aching but you're too shy to say it
Inside we both know what's been going on
We know the game and we're gonna play it
And if you ask me how I'm feeling
Don't tell me you're too blind to see
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you
No, I'm never gonna give you up
No, I'm never gonna let you down
No, I'll never run around and hurt you
Never, ever desert you
We've known each other for so long
Your heart's been aching but
Never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you
No, I'm never gonna give you up
No, I'm never gonna let you down
No, I'll never run around and hurt you
I'll never, ever desert you
_yes._
i thought it was a link to free v-bucks
When I read the first verse and realized what you just did, I laughed harder than I'm proud to assume.
The second guy on phone: why is he disappointed.🤣🤣🤣🤣
He couldn't read fast enough.
where is the longer version where the text is also read out loud?
Man I hated num pad typing on those old cell phones
BUT, once you memorize the num pad comepletelly? You can text WITHOUT looking at your phone just like you were breathing which is very handing for text and drive and even in the classroom without the teacher taking your when they caught you looking down
@@Phantom9587 yea kinda like typing on a computer keyboard. i only have to look once or twice to look where my hands are placed so i don't start typing gibberish(typing the letter next to the letter i wanted to type out instead)
@@Phantom9587 With enough practice, you can use swype without looking.
@@ShimrraJamaane we bow down before you
Those Morse guys really went all in, with the weird looking uniform and all😂
Why they didn't taught us about Morse codes. These are important and a life saver.
My school did, but i kinda slept while at it
The only one that should be known is SOS for laymen.
Of course Morse was faster than typing on a T9 keyboard
well yeah morse code you have to push multiple times as well
me typing on a controller vs me texting on my phone XD
The morse code message :
Tactical Air Support Incoming
I remember watching this on Leno when it aired.
From memory, the message was a current Geico commercial slogan. (I forgot the actual commercial slogan) but was something like:
“You won’t believe, but I just save a lot on my car insurance”
(so there was a good chance that the receiving old-tymey Morse code guy, could of figured out the message, half way though the
message.
-
Anyway, I was happy he won, because back then, I thought the whole 10 keypad texting, was totally pathetic.
From what I could make from the video, he sends "I just saved a bunch on car insurance".
This competition would be right up Leno's alley. I'm sure he loved it; all 15 seconds of it.
Me: tryin to understand what he send by listening the beeping sound
My brain all of a sudden: Red is not an imposter
LMAO
Everybody gangsta, until grandpa grabs the key.
I hate to say this even with my smartphone his Morse code is faster then my texting
A good Morse operator is scary fast. You need a good texter to beat them. Also for it to be a fair contest the texter should use only one finger/thumb.
The message “haha Morse go brrrr”
The random introvert - i am gonna destroy this mans whole carrier
Ofcs the morse code is easy to a guy who used to save millions of lifes
Not necessarily. It isn't a pre-requisite from the army anymore. In fact more people do Morse Code outside of the military than any that live today.
This reminded me how awful the old keypads were, having to do multiple presses and even pausing if the next letter is on the same key.
Now this time switch that phone to a full on touch screen phone :3
Morsecode guy: send an airstrike.
Morsecode guy 2: on the way
👍👍 and CW doesn’t depend on a cell tower that’s going to shut off. Around the world with 1 watt KE5MUG
This two guys just spend 30 years of his life to turns into a pro in Morse code
That morse cose guy probobly has years and years of experience at sea or on shore verses a guy whos had a cell phone like 2 years
To be fair, texting for atleast a month with an old nokia 3310, you will probably get used to it faster than studying morse code which i pressumed would take years to atleast get good, not to mention become that fast.
@@jaysrandomvideos9483 fair point. And morse code takes alot more motion per letter.
@@jaysrandomvideos9483 It doesnt take years really. Learning it will take ye a few hours. Mastering the same speed rate as in the video will maybe take a few months
> 15mins Morse Code tutorial recommended by YT randomly
*Watched it
TH-cam: Now take this
Them: “hahaha when this whole internet fad is over they’ll be sorry”
You’ve been in my recommendations for a full week now. Lets watch you
Huh. We need a rematch.
They were using keypads back there
Who else got this video in recommends after 5 years??
who can translate the message from Morse code
It begins " I just saved a bunch...", I can't get the rest because people start cheering. To get even that I had to slow the video down a bit. That guy is pretty fast.
@@eejii1724 woah. Bro u just earned my respect for translating that code
"i just saved a bunch of money for my car insurances"
If you think the SMS was slow, then you should’ve seen the blonde in her twenties going below the speed limit in the passing lane this morning. I should add that she was in a Toyota Yaris with pride stickers all over it. Textbook 😂
This comment section is the reason why I pay my internet.
Everybody:"Sms is faster"
Morse code man:"hold ma beer"
It is though... Not only is sms faster you don't have to get fucking trained to type messages.
No, Morse code man said: •••• --- •-•• •-- -- -•-- -••• • • •-•
Imagine this with latest smart phones
Getting two experts in morse code and two teenagers, and this is old when phones keyboard were small so you have to press a key multiple times to get a specific letter, i think with more modern phones it would be such an easy win sadly they didn't exist yet.
Im pretty sure you searched on youtube: "What is faster, morse or..." cause you are considering lerning morse code right?
SMS 1 : Let them win and we got the money
SMS 2 : Alright...
Who else could talk T9? Me and my buddy called each other “chubi” all the time
i love how they got the worlds fastest morse code writer but got some slow as fuck typer to type on sms
Now try that with a smart phone where you don´t have to press a button 3 times to get a fricking letter vs morse code.
My man out here jitter-clicking Morse code
youtube algorithm really is weird, I was watching haunted places on earth then i'm here
The message says"I just saved a bunch of money on my car insurance." No joke that's the real message they sended
However the cip was cut and isn't complete
the morse code translates to "I think my sister is pregnant. Come over to the party! I'm gonna be a father."
anyone knows what was the message by the morse tones? I wanna know
@@silvia.4442 wow! thanks!
The first letter is an "e"
Can confirm
The Morse Code Guy requesting air support
no fair. my phone won't do morse code :(
I do not text it is a waste of time morse code is better better
The gboard app has a method of sending sms with morse code
just bang it on a hard surface - it will work :-)
Average sms fans vs average morse code enjoyer
Morse Code, of course. Like shorthand is faster than handwriting or hand printing.
Maybe I'm gonna recommend my mom to switch from phone to morse code
I have no idea what happened.
they green visor caps were perfect
Plot twist he called an air strike on his neighbors
-Ok, listen: when i will lift my hand, you Will do the same. We Will win!
- But i dont know Morse code!
- Who cares! No one knows it!
Military operators who sent encrypted sets of five letters in a group routinely sent and received at 50 WPM. Morse operators can be much much faster than texting.
No, only on a T9 pad. With swipe typing, you can text much faster.
@@pravda9646 the world record is something like 88 words per minute or about 440 characters per minute
I'd like to see this again but using a proper keyboard and a world champion typer