RIP: Sony no longer making iconic Walkman cassette player

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[h1]Sony Walkman cassette player, RIP[/h1]
By Liz Goodwin

AP09070103377.jpg
Another iconic technological device has been banished to the dustbin of history: Sony will no longer produce its Walkman cassette player due to dismal sales. The final batch of the portable tape players was shipped from Japan in April, http://news.yahoo.com/s/zd/20101024/tc_zd/256062">according to PC Magazine.

A Chinese company will continue to produce a few models for the Walkman faithful, http://www.nypost.com/p/n...n_V6lAkEhrNQV1MUbuxib8fK">according to the New York Post. Sony has sold about 220 million Walkman devices since the gadget's explosive 1979 debut, but the portable cassette player has steadily yielded market share to portable CD players and then eventually MP3 players, symbolized by Apple's no-less-iconic iPod. (Sony will continue to make portable CD players.)

Apple founder Steve Jobs, who helped introduce the iPod, was evidently very impressed with the Walkman when he first saw one 25 years ago.

"I remember Akio Morita gave Steve and me each one of the first Sony Walkmans," http://www.businessweek.c...10_44/b4201096309840.htm">former Apple CEO John Sculley told Businessweek. "None of us had ever seen anything like that before because there had never been a product like that. This is 25 years ago and Steve was fascinated by it. The first thing he did with his was take it apart and he looked at every single part. How the fit and finish was done, how it was built."

The iPod has already outsold the Walkman since its debut in 2001, http://www.ibtimes.com/ar...y-apple-walkman-ipod.htm">according to the International Business Times.

Sony uses the Walkman name for its new MP3 players. Meanwhile, in another blow to connoisseurs of outmoded technologies,  the company also announced in April that it would no longer make floppy disks.

(Photo: AP.)
 


[h1]Sony Walkman cassette player, RIP[/h1]
By Liz Goodwin

AP09070103377.jpg
Another iconic technological device has been banished to the dustbin of history: Sony will no longer produce its Walkman cassette player due to dismal sales. The final batch of the portable tape players was shipped from Japan in April, http://news.yahoo.com/s/zd/20101024/tc_zd/256062">according to PC Magazine.

A Chinese company will continue to produce a few models for the Walkman faithful, http://www.nypost.com/p/n...n_V6lAkEhrNQV1MUbuxib8fK">according to the New York Post. Sony has sold about 220 million Walkman devices since the gadget's explosive 1979 debut, but the portable cassette player has steadily yielded market share to portable CD players and then eventually MP3 players, symbolized by Apple's no-less-iconic iPod. (Sony will continue to make portable CD players.)

Apple founder Steve Jobs, who helped introduce the iPod, was evidently very impressed with the Walkman when he first saw one 25 years ago.

"I remember Akio Morita gave Steve and me each one of the first Sony Walkmans," http://www.businessweek.c...10_44/b4201096309840.htm">former Apple CEO John Sculley told Businessweek. "None of us had ever seen anything like that before because there had never been a product like that. This is 25 years ago and Steve was fascinated by it. The first thing he did with his was take it apart and he looked at every single part. How the fit and finish was done, how it was built."

The iPod has already outsold the Walkman since its debut in 2001, http://www.ibtimes.com/ar...y-apple-walkman-ipod.htm">according to the International Business Times.

Sony uses the Walkman name for its new MP3 players. Meanwhile, in another blow to connoisseurs of outmoded technologies,  the company also announced in April that it would no longer make floppy disks.

(Photo: AP.)
 
Didn't record companies stop making cassettes like 10 years ago though? I heard this on the news this morning.
 
Didn't record companies stop making cassettes like 10 years ago though? I heard this on the news this morning.
 
i'm more surprised there are still tapes being made to put in the walkman...

i know we all remember recording the radio and using it in our tape players

then having to burn a new cd for school just to add ONE song
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thank god we have mp3 players now
 
i'm more surprised there are still tapes being made to put in the walkman...

i know we all remember recording the radio and using it in our tape players

then having to burn a new cd for school just to add ONE song
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thank god we have mp3 players now
 
Do new albums drop in Cassette form anymore?
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Im serious BTW...I really wanna know. I never really bothered to look
 
Do new albums drop in Cassette form anymore?
laugh.gif



Im serious BTW...I really wanna know. I never really bothered to look
 
Originally Posted by KayCurrency

Do new albums drop in Cassette form anymore?
laugh.gif



Im serious BTW...I really wanna know. I never really bothered to look
my thought exactly
laugh.gif

  
 
Originally Posted by KayCurrency

Do new albums drop in Cassette form anymore?
laugh.gif



Im serious BTW...I really wanna know. I never really bothered to look
my thought exactly
laugh.gif

  
 
Thought they been deaded these

I used to have one with no rewind button, had to take the tape out, turn it over, fast forward it,then flip it back over
 
Thought they been deaded these

I used to have one with no rewind button, had to take the tape out, turn it over, fast forward it,then flip it back over
 
^ yeah, I remember when I got my first one with auto-reverse. Incredible technology!

When I was at college I used to commute an hour each way so would carry spare batteries and a bunch of tapes - just took up a bunch of space. My CD walkman wasn't much better - it's just incredible how these things have changed in such a short time.

My wife always thinks it's interesting that the CD is really the first technology to come and go in our lives - when we were aware of it anyway. It was huge when it came out but it's basically obsolete now.
 
^ yeah, I remember when I got my first one with auto-reverse. Incredible technology!

When I was at college I used to commute an hour each way so would carry spare batteries and a bunch of tapes - just took up a bunch of space. My CD walkman wasn't much better - it's just incredible how these things have changed in such a short time.

My wife always thinks it's interesting that the CD is really the first technology to come and go in our lives - when we were aware of it anyway. It was huge when it came out but it's basically obsolete now.
 
tired.gif
now how will I be able to listen to my Illmatic and Wu-tang tapes?


Spoiler [+]
what year are we in?
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