Most items went through transformations to get to the modern style that it is today. The phonograph wasn’t always called the ‘phonograph’. It went through progression and slowly morphed into modern technology. The phonograph was Thomas Edison’s first major invention. “The Talking Machine” by Randall Stross and “The History of of the Cylinder Phonograph” both include information about the process of refining and marketing the phonograph. The article “Psst..Hey You,” includes not only information about the process of refining and marketing but also the development of the Audio Spotlight. Throughout “The Talking Machine,” Randall Stross talked about the phonograph and how the public talked about it before it was ready to sell. The invention of the phonograph got out to the public and many different possibilities blossomed among the audience. A lot of positive theories were thought about the device. The article states, “the word of the invention spread, however, the outside world saw greater possibilities. ‘The dead could speak to us eternally,’” (Stross 2). Everyone was excited for the device to go public. The quote indicates that if the the phonograph was ready to sell, sales would be made. The device was popular. …show more content…
According to the article of “History of the Cylinder Phonograph,” “As the December 22, 1877, issue reported, ‘Mr. Thomas A. Edison recently came into this office, placed a little machine on our desk, turned a crank, and the machine inquired as to our health, asked how we liked the phonograph, informed us that it was very well, and bid us a cordial goodnight.’ Interest was great, and the invention was reported in several New York newspapers,” (History 3). This quote shows that the offices of Scientific American had a strong liking on the
Emile Berliner invented the gramophone. “However, the biggest innovation came in 1894 from the mind of United States inventor Emile Berliner. He devised a way for creation of flat shaped discs, and he renamed his graphophone design that utilized this disc as gramophone.” (Sound Recording History). In Cold Sassy Tree, the record player had a huge impact on Grandpa Blakeslee’s relationship with Miss Love.
The development of the phonograph is similar to the development of the Audio Spotlight. The first rudimentary machine was for recording and playing back sounds. The way it all started out was using paper strips to make a record of telegraph messages. By attaching a needle to the back of the diaphragm and mounting it above rollers for the paper strips, then putting sound to the into the mouthpiece causes the diaphragm to move. After, this causes the needle to inscribe squiggled indentations into the strips. Last, the indentations would move the attached diaphragm, which should reproduce the original sound.
1. Thomas Edison, the inventor of the phonograph, thought it would be useful as a
After reading"The Incredible Talking Machine","History Of The Cylinder Phonograph", and"Psst...Hey, You", it becomes evident that the phonograph and Audio Spotlight are similar.Both products were built,refined,and marketed.As a result,they became widely used and evolved into products we still use today.
Early recording companies such as Columbia and the Victor Talking Machine Company sprang up as a result of this invention. Though the later disc record phonographs (also known as “gramophones”) won the format war against Edison’s cylindrical phonograph, Edison himself began the chain of innovation. If not for the phonograph, the Original Dixieland Jazz Band would not have recorded their first composition. Consequently, no later Jazz recordings would be
Perhaps an even greater example of technology’s influence on the music industry is told with the
The device became very popular in the United States. Later on Garrett sold his rights to his invention for
James T. Russell and the Invention of the Compact Disc James Russell was born in Bremerton, Washington in 1931. His first invention, at six years old, was a remote-control battleship with a storage chamber for his lunch. In 1953, he earned his Bachelor of Arts in physics and graduated from Reed College in Portland. Afterwards he went to work as a Physicist in General Electric's nearby labs in Richland, Washington. There he started many experimental instrumentation projects.
Looking at the available information [2] Polyphonic should have seen that the market trend for sales from big box stores over previous decade had been in a sharp decline (Figure 1) and considered targeting a different market segment from the beginning. Polyphonic’s either didn’t see the trend or thought that it wouldn’t affect the release of the new technology. Because of the late discovery the
1. Kevin Rio explains that the device was mostly used in bars and arcades up to 1930 when it was adopted in the media as an entertainment tool.
RCA Victor launched these revolutionary phonographs that spun at 33 1/3-RPM which were pressed on a 30 cm (11.81 inches) disc and had a playing time of 22 minutes. This record was made out of a flexible plastic disc and could play up to about 10 minutes per side. They achieved this by using a shallower and a closer together groove than found on 78-RPM records. Despite this revolutionary creation the long-play disc was initially a commercial failure. The great depression brought about many financial hardships creating consumer affordability
It meant that the public was exposed to electronics and it meant that individual firms were created
In most households during the 1930s, this was one of the main living room items because of it’s size and importance (Feature Radio in the 1930s).
Despite the Phonograph and the Gramophone’s success, the invention of the radio in 1906 was a threat to the recording industry. The major record companies had a hard time keeping their own sales up due to the radio, but the later invention of the LPs and 45 rpm records made the sales rocket. By the 60s and 70s, the records had taken America by storm.
Thomas Alva Edison, born in 1847, invented many things, including the phonograph in 1877. In 1888 Edison announced that he was working on “an instrument which does for the eye what the phonograph does for the ear.” Some point between May and August of 1891, the kinetiscope was complete. The kinetiscope was a cabinet with a peephole to watch min films playing inside that were about 90 seconds long. The customer would only have to drop a penny in the slot and look through the viewfinder at the image. The first pictures that played in kinetiscopes were of dancing girls, performing animals, and man at work. It was designed by Edison's assistant William Kennedy Laurie Dickson. The kinetiscope's name came from the Greek word for “motion writer.”