The death of an Icon

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dozer
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The death of an Icon

Post by dozer »

I can remember my first Walkman bought it in BKK, thought it was the best thing since sliced bread.

http://new.uk.music.yahoo.com/blogs/beh ... ny-walkman

The life and death of the Sony Walkman
Posted Mon 25 Oct 2010 14:51 BST by Ben Gilbert in Behind The Music
Thirty years ago, the idea that a music fan could carry their entire collection around in a pocket would be unthinkable, if not ludicrous. Now we can take our favourite songs and albums everywhere. Which goes a long way to explaining the demise of the Sony Walkman.

It was today confirmed that the iconic cassette players, which had the same impact on global society and pop culture in the ‘80s as iPods have had in the last decade, will no longer be manufactured.

The news was announced by Sony spokesman Hiroko Nakamura, who said the company ceased production of the once ground-breaking portable music player in April. Sales are set to end once the last batch disappears from stores.

For many, this news will come as a surprise. But that's not because they're still buying or using them. The Walkman is instead now considered a long-gone cultural relic from a different age, which suffered at the hands of portable CD players before the rise of digital technology confirmed its terminal decline.

The first generation Walkman, which was called the Soundabout in America and the Stowaway in the UK, was released on 1 July 1979 in Japan. Despite only selling 3,000 units in its first month, it soon became a definitive symbol of the decade, merging music with technology into a culturally revolutionary whole.

For the generation raised in the ‘80s, making compilation tapes and recording the charts, phrases like ‘auto-reverse' or a first sighting of the water-proof, yellow WM-F5 device will forever live in the memory. However, this has not stopped Sony's flagship music product falling into decline as technology moved on apace.

Sony's announcement comes just days after the iPod's ninth anniversary on 23 October. Of course, the rise of CDs is as much responsible for making both the Walkman and cassette tapes an anachronism and music lovers now have unparalleled access to the full scope of their collection and the devices that play it.

Official figures demonstrate the enormous strides made by the market. Sony has sold 220 million cassette Walkman players globally since the product's launch. However, in under ten years, Apple has shifted 277 million iPods. The Walkman offered consumers limited battery life, clunky design, poor sound quality and a puny capacity. All of these have now been remedied and polished to perfection.

So for some, this news will be celebrated as confirmation of our technological progress. But for those mourning Sony's decision, which comes after they pulled the plug on floppy discs in April, there is some consolation. Chinese makers will continue selling cassette Walkmans in Asia and the Middle East and the brand name will live on in their CD and MD-based products.
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BaaBaa.
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Re: The death of an Icon

Post by BaaBaa. »

dozer wrote:Chinese makers will continue selling cassette Walkmans in Asia and the Middle East and the brand name will live on in their CD and MD-based products.
The brand name will live on anyway as sonys mp3 players and music orientated phones carry the walkman brand.
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STEVE G
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Re: The death of an Icon

Post by STEVE G »

I once saw a young punk looking lad here wearing a cassette around his neck on a chain as a fashion accessory which is probably the only way he knew it.
Back in the mid-eighties I used to have an excellent Aiwa walkman type cassette player that was only slightly bigger than a cassette.
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richard
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Re: The death of an Icon

Post by richard »

Throw it the loft. It'll be an antique in decades to come. Years ago I threw 2 very valuable music machines on the dump and have lived to regret it. One was an HMV wind up player with a horn and steel needles and played 16 and 33 speeds. The other was far more valuable. It was a giant size wooden box and had a turntable that played metal discs about 18 inches in diameter. Think I'd be worth a small fortune if I had kept all the things I inherited many years ago. Even my BSA 500 Gold Star which I sold for 50 quid is now worth 15000 quid. :banghead: :banghead: :banghead:

Still got a box full of stamps stored somewhere though :D

Which prompts me to open a new thread :idea: :idea: :idea:
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dozer
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Re: The death of an Icon

Post by dozer »

The Walkman is resurrected 35 years after the original as a high-end device. Cost: $700

Atheists have no need of a god. Our lives are not based on fear or guilt. We are moral because we know it's right.

Never attribute to malice that which can be explained by stupidity. R J Hanlon
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