Nostalgic

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PAKISTAN-MUSEUM-CLOCKS

In this picture taken on November 26, 2021, collector Gul Kakar shows his antique clocks at a museum housed inside the city's tribal police headquarters compound in Quetta.

- The tick-tock of hundreds of antique clocks fills a small hall in the southwestern Pakistani city of Quetta, where collector Gul Kakar, a 44-year-old police officer, swears he will spend all the time he has left caring for them.

'Pakistan-museum-collecting-clocks,' by Maaz Khan (Photo by BANARAS KHAN/AFP via Getty Images)
 
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The cover of Pakistan's first passport

Issued in late 1947, the cover of Pakistan’s first passport is largely beige in colour and only partially green.
 
Pakistanis did not require pre-arrival visas and could get visas-on-arrival in any country they wished to travel, including India

The Bengali text had disappeared from the West Pakistani passport

The Bengali text had disappeared from the West Pakistani passport


By 1954, the colour green had ousted the beige. The two flags were still there, but the holder's name now appeared on the cover.

Due to tensions between the state and the Bengali majority of East Pakistan, the government had introduced the One Unit scheme, which treated the ethnically diverse West Pakistan as a single province and the Bengali-dominated East Pakistan as the other province.

Consequently, West Pakistani passports (like the one in the picture) had 'Pakistan Passport' written only in English and Urdu, whereas East Pakistani passports had the same written in English and Bengali.

This was soon changed, but the rest of the contents remained the same: holder's name, photo, address, profession, and marital status.

Pakistanis could still get on-arrival-visas in most countries, except Israel, the Soviet Union and Afghanistan – countries that Pakistan had developed strained relations with. However, India and Pakistan were still issuing on-arrival-visas to one another despite the fact that both had gone to war in 1948.
 
Cartridge console games

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The perfect treat of Sega and Nintendo consoles were on the wishlist of every 90’s kid. Those games were what made us do our homeworks. Games like Donkey Kong, Contra and Mario Bros. are classics and we still love them. The expansion of computer gaming led to these good old play stations to be replaced for good.
 
Box set TV and antennas

There used to be a time when, to watch your favorite TV shows like ‘Ainak Wala Jinn’ and the classic PTV dramas, you had to be home on time and have the antenna pointing in the right direction.

Otherwise there was team work involved, with one person manually pointing antenna to different directions on the roof, while others yelled, if the picture got clear.

Today, you can record the show and watch it if you can get away from your phone.

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Reel Cameras

Technology killed the primitive analog film camera.

No birthday or picture was complete till you held a smile for five seconds to ensure the frame was in focus.

The excitement and wait continued till the film was actually developed and pictures printed. In fact, our generation was probably the last generation that got their pictures clicked on film!

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