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Intrepid Homoludens 12-17-2005 02:33 PM

The TRUE inventor of the Walkman kicks Sony's ass
 
http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/.../17fpro184.jpg http://www.ieee-virtual-museum.org/m...iAeMFPgy2e.jpg
“I pressed the button, and
suddenly we were floating.
It was an incredible feeling.”

- ANDREAS PAVEL



I've encapsulated the article for here.

An Unlikely Trendsetter Made Earphones a Way of Life | The New York Times, December 17, 2005

Quote:

IN the late 1960's, Andreas Pavel and his friends gathered regularly at his house here to listen to records, from Bach to Janis Joplin, and talk politics and philosophy. In their flights of fancy, they wondered why it should not be possible to take their music with them wherever they went.

Inspired by those discussions, Mr. Pavel invented the device known today as the Walkman. But it took more than 25 years of battling the Sony Corporation and others in courts and patent offices around the world before he finally won the right to say it: Andreas Pavel invented the portable personal stereo player.

"I filed my first patent a complete innocent, thinking it would be a simple matter, 12 months or so, to establish my ownership and begin production," he said at the house where he first conceived of the device. "I never imagined that it would end up consuming so much time and taking me away from my real interests in life."

Born in Germany, Mr. Pavel came to Brazil at age 6, when his father was recruited to work for the Matarazzo industrial group....His mother, Ninca Bordano, an artist, had a house built for the family with a studio for her and an open-air salon with high-end audio equipment, meant for literary and musical gatherings.

[What drove] Mr. Pavel back to Europe [after enjoying Brazi's intellectual and cultural climate] was his discontent with the military dictatorship then in power in Brazil. By that time, though, he had already invented the device he initially called the stereobelt, which he saw more as a means to "add a soundtrack to real life" than an item to be mass marketed

"Oh, it was purely aesthetic," he said when asked his motivation in creating a portable personal stereo player. "It took years to discover that I had made a discovery and that I could file a patent."

MR. PAVEL still remembers when and where he was the first time he tested his invention and which piece of music he chose for his experiment.

It was February 1972, he was in Switzerland with his girlfriend, and the cassette they heard playing on their headphones was "Push Push," a collaboration between the jazz flutist Herbie Mann and the blues-rock guitarist Duane Allman.

"I was in the woods in St. Moritz, in the mountains," he recalled. "The snow was falling down. I pressed the button, and suddenly we were floating. It was an incredible feeling, to realize that I now had the means to multiply the aesthetic potential of any situation."

Over the next few years, he took his invention to one audio company after another - Grundig, Philips, Yamaha and ITT among them - to see if there was interest in manufacturing his device. But everywhere he went, he said, he met with rejection or ridicule.

"They all said they didn't think people would be so crazy as to run around with headphones, that this is just a gadget, a useless gadget of a crazy nut," he said.

[Undaunted,] Mr. Pavel filed a patent in March 1977 in Milan. Over the next year and a half, he took the same step in the United States, Germany, England and Japan.

Sony started selling the Walkman in 1979, and in 1980 began negotiating with Mr. Pavel, who was seeking a royalty fee. The company agreed in 1986 to a limited fee arrangement covering sales only in Germany, and then for only a few models.

So in 1989 he began new proceedings, this time in British courts, that dragged on and on, eating up his limited financial resources.

At one point, Mr. Pavel said, he owed his lawyer hundreds of thousands of dollars and was being followed by private detectives and countersued by Sony. "They had frozen all my assets, I couldn't use checks or credit cards," and the outlook for him was grim.

In 1996, the case was dismissed, leaving Mr. Pavel with more than $3 million in court costs to pay.

But he persisted, warning Sony that he would file new suits in every country where he had patented his invention, and in 2003, after another round of negotiations, the company agreed to settle out of court.

...European press accounts said Mr. Pavel had received a cash settlement for damages in the low eight figures and was now also receiving royalties on some Walkman sales.

TTHESE days, Mr. Pavel divides his time between Italy and Brazil, and once again considers himself primarily a philosopher. But he is also using some of his money to develop an invention he calls a dreamkit, which he describes as a "hand-held, personal, multimedia, sense-extension device," and to indulge his unflagging interest in music.

Recently, he has been promoting the career of Altamiro Carrilho, a flutist whom he regards as the greatest living Brazilian musician. He is also financing a project that he describes as the complete discography of every record ever released in Brazil.

Some of his friends have suggested he might have a case against the manufacturers of MP3 players, reasoning that those devices are a direct descendant of the Walkman. Mr. Pavel said that while he saw a kinship, he was not eager to take on another long legal battle.

"I have known other inventors in similar predicaments and most of them become that story, which is the most tragic, sad and melancholic thing that can happen," he said. "Somebody becomes a lawsuit, he loses all interest in other things and deals only with the lawsuit. Nobody ever said I was obsessed. I kept my other interests alive, in philosophy and music and literature."

"I didn't have time to pursue them, but now I have reconquered my time," he continued. "So, no, I'm not interested anymore in patents or legal fights or anything like that. I don't want to be reduced to the label of being the inventor of the Walkman."
:9~ Goddamn, I seriously would love to meet this guy and hang out with him for hours and just talk and brainstorm.

SamNMax 12-20-2005 09:07 PM

0 replies.

Maquisard 12-20-2005 09:11 PM

2, actually.

SamNMax 12-20-2005 09:14 PM

No 3

Kingzjester 12-20-2005 11:16 PM

I think nobody gives a fuck. Just because a guy styles himself a philospher and has discovered the walkman, don't make him my pop idol.

Intrepid Homoludens 12-21-2005 12:52 AM

And he didn't ask you to be his pop idol, either. I wouldn't, myself.

SamNMax 12-21-2005 02:39 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Kingzjester
I think nobody gives a fuck. Just because a guy styles himself a philospher and has discovered the walkman, don't make him my pop idol.

lol

Wormsie 12-22-2005 02:54 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SamNMax
0 replies.

Weren't you supposed to be gone by now?

SamNMax 12-22-2005 01:13 PM

Aren't I supposed to be on your ignore list (read the thread)?

Wormsie 12-22-2005 02:58 PM

I removed you from there when it seemed like you were posting less.

SamNMax 12-22-2005 02:59 PM

What difference does it make?

Maquisard 12-22-2005 03:00 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SamNMax
Aren't I supposed to be on your ignore list (read the thread)?

I think it's funny that "aren't I" and "am I not" mean the same thing, but use different verb forms. Seeing as how "I am" is accurate, and not "I are", I wonder where "aren't I" comes from.

SamNMax 12-22-2005 03:02 PM

Look into it.

Maquisard 12-22-2005 04:00 PM

Hey, you were born here, so you should know. :shifty:

SamNMax 12-22-2005 04:12 PM

lol wut?

Maquisard 12-22-2005 04:44 PM

You're a natural born killer citizen, while I'm naturalized. I'd expect you to be better versed in English grammar than I am.

SamNMax 12-22-2005 04:54 PM

Oh, really?

Maquisard 12-22-2005 05:48 PM

Not really, I just want you to admit I'm smarter. :shifty:

SamNMax 12-22-2005 05:53 PM

Oh, okay.

Maquisard 12-22-2005 05:54 PM

That solves it then.


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