Walkman

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SONY Recorder Walkman (TCM-S68V)
MD Walkman
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MD Walkman
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Sony Walkman SRF-S84 transistor radio (released 2001)

The Sony Walkman personal stereo was a transistorized miniature portable cassette tape player invented by Akio Morita, Masaru Ibuka, and Kozo Ohsone, manufactured by Sony Corporation. The first Sony Walkman stereo was sold in 1979. The name Walkman was invented by Akio Morita. A German inventor, Andreas Pavel, claimed that he had came up with a similar device called a Stereobelt back in 1977. After court battles, Pavel and Sony came to an out of court settlement in 1999.

The original blue-and-silver Walkman model TPS-L2 went on sale in Japan on July 1, 1979. In the UK, it was launched at the London rooftop nightclub Regines as the Sony Stowaway, a name withdrawn within three months of its first public appearance outside Japan in May 1980. In the United States, it was originally called the Sony Soundabout, but this too was eventually replaced by "Walkman". In Sweden, the name Freestyle was used.

Offering the ability for people to carry their own choice of music with them, the Walkman stereo was one of the most successful new consumer product introductions of the 1980s. Hit pop songs were written about it ("Wired for Sound" by Cliff Richard), hundreds of clones flooded the marketplace, and they quickly became ubiquitous amongst urban pedestrians and commuters. It was often linked to the jogging fad while Sony marketing also underlined its suitability for roller-skating.

Sony has sold more than 330 million Walkman stereos worldwide, including approximately 150 million in the US.

The original Walkman was based on the Pressman, a business-oriented portable cassette recorder. While retaining the general form, the recording capability was replaced with stereo playback and two mini headphone jacks so two people could listen at the same time (though it came with only one pair of headphones). Where the Pressman had the recording button, the Walkman had a "hotline" button which activated a small built-in microphone (retained from the Pressman), partially overriding the sound from the cassette, and allowing one user to talk to the other over the music. The dual jacks and "hotline" button were phased out in the follow-up Walkman II model, which was more purpose-designed.

Some devices were also capable of recording. The best quality Sony Walkman cassette deck was the Walkman Professional WM-D6C, which was comparable in audio quality with the best non-portable cassette decks. Unusual for a portable device, it had recording level meters and manual control of the left and right recording levels. Powered by the mains or by 4 AA batteries (compared with 2 for most Walkman models), it was widely used by journalists and developed a following among hi-fi enthusiasts.

By the late 1990s, the machine was generally passed over in favor of the digital technologies of CD, DAT and MiniDisc. After 2000, cassette-based Walkman products (and their clones) were approaching technological obsolesence as the cassette format fades. The consumer market is steadily replacing the format with CD, MiniDisc and, especially since the popularity of the Apple iPod and its clones, solid-state or hard disk MP3 players as their costs come down.

The names "Walkman", "Pressman", "Watchman", "Scoopman", and "Discman" are trademarks of Sony, and have been applied to a wide range of portable entertainment devices manufactured by the company. Sony continues to use the "Walkman" brand name for all of these kinds of portable audio devices as well, after the "Discman" name for CD players was dropped in the late 1990s.

See also

External links

sv:Freestyle

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