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We're fifty years into the future Rupert Goodwins
ZDNet UK October 18, 2004 Ladies and gentlemen - please raise your glasses and toast the Regency TR-1. On 18 October, 1954, this revolutionary device was announced in America. Fifty years later, it has been blamed for rock and roll, the death of the US consumer electronics industry, the relentless rise of IBM and the shocking state of modern manners. Not a bad score for a transistor radio. It wasn't just a transistor radio, of course. It was the first. In fact, it was the first transistorised mass-market device, and it symbolised the central role that technology was taking in the post-war world. Never underestimate the power of such symbols - Thomas Watson Jr., head of IBM, gave his senior managers a TR-1 apiece to kick-start the company's transition from valves. That symbolism had a different flavour ten years later as outfits like Sony and Toshiba used the same technology to smoothly wrest control of the market from its inventors. Outsourcing fears are nothing new. A lot has changed. The TR-1 had four transistors and cost $50; last week I bought a 256MB SD card - for a radio, appropriately enough - at about the same price. That has two billion transistors in it, or four thousand times as many as were used in the entire production run of the Regency. Factoring in devaluation, each transistor costs around four billion times less. We're living through an industrial revolution of unparalleled speed and reach - and it's all borne aloft on a massive tsunami of transistors. Much more at: http://www.kurthanson.com/archive/news/102204/index.asp |
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Mike Terry wrote:
We're fifty years into the future Rupert Goodwins ZDNet UK October 18, 2004 Ladies and gentlemen - please raise your glasses and toast the Regency TR-1. On 18 October, 1954, this revolutionary device was announced in America. Fifty years later, it has been blamed for rock and roll, the death of the US consumer electronics industry, the relentless rise of IBM and the shocking state of modern manners. Not a bad score for a transistor radio. It wasn't just a transistor radio, of course. It was the first. In fact, it was the first transistorised mass-market device, and it symbolised the central role that technology was taking in the post-war world. Never underestimate the power of such symbols - Thomas Watson Jr., head of IBM, gave his senior managers a TR-1 apiece to kick-start the company's transition from valves. That symbolism had a different flavour ten years later as outfits like Sony and Toshiba used the same technology to smoothly wrest control of the market from its inventors. Outsourcing fears are nothing new. A lot has changed. The TR-1 had four transistors and cost $50; last week I bought a 256MB SD card - for a radio, appropriately enough - at about the same price. That has two billion transistors in it, or four thousand times as many as were used in the entire production run of the Regency. Factoring in devaluation, each transistor costs around four billion times less. We're living through an industrial revolution of unparalleled speed and reach - and it's all borne aloft on a massive tsunami of transistors. Much more at: http://www.kurthanson.com/archive/news/102204/index.asp A few years ago at the Awards Banquet of the Vintage Radio & Phonograph Society's convention Dallas Texas, a member of the VRPS who was the project engineer at Texas Instruments on the development of what was to become the TR-1 spoke about it's development. He had a hand wired prototype to show. It was a very intersting talk. He told how they had to make their own IF and audio transformers as there was nothing small enough available. They used the tuning capacitor out of a small Emerson portable tube set. When they took the prototypes to Indiana to IDE( Regency) who was contracted to manufactuer the sets, the engineers at Regency had some concerns that since the set only used four transistors it might not have much sensitivity. The TI engineers took one outside one night and was able to tune in WBAP in Ft. Worth TX. |
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