The First Transistor Radio

(spectrum.ieee.org)

51 points | by samizdis 12 hours ago ago

6 comments

  • Jun8 an hour ago ago

    The video linked in the article looks so quaint, but it was only 70 years ago!

    The ladies putting in the components work pretty fast, about 5s per component for smaller ones, so about 720 cph. Top speed pick and place robots can now do 200k cph (https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pick-and-place_machine) so ~300 or so faster. This increase pales considerably to any other aspect of such a process, eg cost of a transistor.

  • rmason 28 minutes ago ago

    Got a transistor radio as a birthday gift as a young boy, near as I can remember it would have been early sixties. It was a Zenith and didn't look a lot different from the one in the picture. The Detroit music scene was vibrant back then on AM radio Also late at night got introduced to blues on a Chicago station and was never quite the same.

    After fifty years the radio was still going strong and I gifted it to my Dad so he could listen to his beloved Detroit Tigers when a game wasn't on cable. I wanted to reclaim it when he passed away but we could never find it in his room. I'd like to think someone is still using it.

  • robertclaus 6 hours ago ago

    Very applicable to today's AI market moving so quickly. NVIDIA's recent open models are effectively the same as TI building a Radio to sell transistors.

  • whyage 6 hours ago ago

    Great story. I'm struck by the design similarity to the first iPod models, with the large wheel moved to the center.

    • forinti 6 hours ago ago

      It's quite similar to my Grandad's Spica ST600 (started production in 1964).

      They both had a leather case, too.

  • WalterBright 2 hours ago ago

    A fine story about American capitalism!