I remember watching Andy Pandy and Bill and Ben at my grandparents house when we were there on holiday every summer. This was a big thrill as we didn't get a tv in Dublin until about 1965. When we did, the screen wasn't that big so my Dad bought this weird magnifying glass that you could clip onto the front of the screen (any one else remember those?).
I remember my first job in 1968 and, like so many previous posters, the adjustments to be made when golfballs came in. But what I really remember was the huge 'magnetic tape typewriter' that came with its own desk and a waist high console beside it containing the two VCR sized tapes that meant for the first time you could type something and then correct it. In a solicitors office, this was an unbelievable bonus because previously, when typing documents (deeds) on the old electric typewriters you had to type them on this sort of beige coloured thick parchment type paper, on both sides, and then on both sides of the opposite 'fold'. Then you would often have another set to do as an insert before making the whole thing up and tying it on the spine with a ribbon. And this is the good bit....if you made a typo, you weren't allowed to correct it - if you couldn't fix it without any hint of a trace of what you had done, you had to type the whole document again.
I also remember some time in the early sixties lying in bed listening to the troop planes going over to the Congo. They had this huge things called Globemasters and when they went overhead (we weren't far from the airport) they made the house shudder so much that they could open the metal framed window latches!