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No, that's by no means originated with computers.

People have said "the phone lines are down" for years, meaning landline phone service was temporarily unavailable (often when no actual physical cables were knocked down off of poles, etc, though that might be where the use of the term originated in that case).

I'm sure there are plenty of other examples of using 'down' to mean the same kind of thing (all of which predated computer use being common in a regular person's life).



Iirc it goes back to telegraphs, the line been physically down would prevent them working and it’s hung around since.

Like hang up, when was the last time I hung up a phone, that style of phone went out of fashion here 30 or more years ago.


Ackshully it's from the even older phones with separate earpiece and fixed microphone. You'd really hang up the earpiece on these old ones.


You'd physically hang up wall phones, even when they had a combined microphone and speaker: https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/I/515Mj67cq3L...


Yes, but what I meant was that the expression is likely even older than from the ones which went out of style 30 years ago.




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