Read it HereWalkman, at 30, a mystery to teen
Alejandro Martinez-Cabrera
Wednesday, July 1, 2009
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What better way to commemorate the 30th anniversary of Sony's iconic Walkman than to ask a teenager for some feedback on the device?
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The BBC couldn't think of one, and neither can I.
I like to imagine that the experience was similar to an archaeologist rediscovering how a recently excavated artifact was employed thousands of years ago. But I'm well aware that it must have been different for 13-year-old Scott Campbell, who co-edits his own news Web site. For one, teenage impatience must have stood in the place where I fantasize scientific curiosity should have been.
"My dad had told me it was the iPod of its day," Campbell wrote. "He had told me it was big, but I hadn't realized he meant that big. It was the size of a small book."
Sure enough, people on the street noticed the antique clinging from his belt with amusement and friends on his school bus were quick to come up with some witty remark.
Campbell went on to criticize the portable cassette player's size, appearance, functionality and the "hissy backtrack and odd warbly noises."
Even when he discovered the cassette had more music on the other side (it took him three days), Campbell was still disappointed it could only hold a small fraction of what an iPod can.
"Did my dad ... really ever think this was a credible piece of technology?"
Ouch.
Damn the stupidity!
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Damn the stupidity!
No, not the Onion. A 13yr old could not figure out the operation of a Walkman and cassette tape.
"All this has happened before --"
"But it doesn't have to happen again. Not if we make up our minds to change. Take a different path. Right here, right now."
"But it doesn't have to happen again. Not if we make up our minds to change. Take a different path. Right here, right now."
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Re: Damn the stupidity!
Credible technology? Frak, no one tell him about 8 Track or records then...
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Re: Damn the stupidity!
Slap the kid upside the back of his head, violently. Kid needs some perspective.
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Re: Damn the stupidity!
Seriously.Tyyr wrote:Slap the kid upside the back of his head, violently. Kid needs some perspective.
I never even owned a walkman or discman, but you'd have to be an imbecile not to recognize that they're the precursors to the iPod. There would be no iPod without the prior development of walkman.
"Not credible technology". I wonder how well that kid would do in the wilderness without his technology. Probably starve to death in a couple of days. What a weenie generation.
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Re: Damn the stupidity!
Someone slap that kid. Jesus.
"Credible piece of technology" my arse. I wish I could see his expression when, in twenty years or so, his kids say the same about his Ipods.
![Rolling Eyes :roll:](./images/smilies/icon_rolleyes.gif)
"Credible piece of technology" my arse. I wish I could see his expression when, in twenty years or so, his kids say the same about his Ipods.
"You've all been selected for this mission because you each have a special skill. Professor Hawking, John Leslie, Phil Neville, the Wu-Tang Clan, Usher, the Sugar Puffs Monster and Daniel Day-Lewis! Welcome to Operation MindFuck!"
Re: Damn the stupidity!
Actually I wonder how ipods could ever be replaced... only change shape and location. The idea of how an ipod works is pretty top technically speaking. Sure you can make it a tooth, or a cybernetic implant of the brain or a ring but it'll run the same way. Playing music from its memory.
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None. They always surrender right before they finish the job and never tell you why.
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None. They always surrender right before they finish the job and never tell you why.
-Remain Star Trek-
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Re: Damn the stupidity!
Ten years ago people would say the same about walkmen.
"You've all been selected for this mission because you each have a special skill. Professor Hawking, John Leslie, Phil Neville, the Wu-Tang Clan, Usher, the Sugar Puffs Monster and Daniel Day-Lewis! Welcome to Operation MindFuck!"
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Re: Damn the stupidity!
Precisely. "They'll never top that," is pretty much a guarantee they will.
Re: Damn the stupidity!
Usually I agree. But in this case I don't see how. You've already gotten rid of the physical element of the media. Only thing left is getting rid of the physical element of the music. And where's the fun in that?Tyyr wrote:Precisely. "They'll never top that," is pretty much a guarantee they will.
![Razz :P](./images/smilies/icon_razz.gif)
How many Minbari does it take to screw in a lightbulb?
None. They always surrender right before they finish the job and never tell you why.
-Remain Star Trek-
None. They always surrender right before they finish the job and never tell you why.
-Remain Star Trek-
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Re: Damn the stupidity!
Just cause we can't see how doesn't mean it isn't there. Do you think people ever saw computers coming?Monroe wrote:Usually I agree. But in this case I don't see how. You've already gotten rid of the physical element of the media. Only thing left is getting rid of the physical element of the music. And where's the fun in that?Tyyr wrote:Precisely. "They'll never top that," is pretty much a guarantee they will.
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Re: Damn the stupidity!
Do you mean "do you think people in the 1920's saw 1950's computers coming", or are you referring to personal computers?Lighthawk wrote:...Do you think people ever saw computers coming?
If the former, then no, for the most part. If the latter, then yes, of course. Anyone working in the industry in the '70s knew they were inevitable.
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Re: Damn the stupidity!
I meant in general. Go back 200 years, and half the stuff that makes a simple PC possible would have been beyond most people's ability to grasp, let alone imagine on their own.Tsukiyumi wrote:Do you mean "do you think people in the 1920's saw 1950's computers coming", or are you referring to personal computers?Lighthawk wrote:...Do you think people ever saw computers coming?
If the former, then no, for the most part. If the latter, then yes, of course. Anyone working in the industry in the '70s knew they were inevitable.
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Re: Damn the stupidity!
Oh, well yeah. No way in hell they saw it coming.
There is only one way of avoiding the war – that is the overthrow of this society. However, as we are too weak for this task, the war is inevitable. -L. Trotsky, 1939
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Re: Damn the stupidity!
That's technology for you, we can imagine how good existing stuff might get, but it's the stuff that doesn't exist yet, that we just have no clue on.Tsukiyumi wrote:Oh, well yeah. No way in hell they saw it coming.
Hell, easy to see in action, look back at TOS, look at the control panels they were passing off as "futuristic". The stuff would be a joke in modern day now, but there was no way the writers could have imagined what kind of things would be coming.
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Re: Damn the stupidity!
Hey, Even I had a walkman CD player. And I'm the youngest on this website!