TECHNOLOGICAL OBSOLESCENCE
It’s a term to describe systems or ways of doing something that have changed significantly within living memory.
For centuries – millennia – change and progress inched forward. Then, about 150 years ago, knowledge reached a critical mass, and technology soared. Things like the telephone and the gramophone made it possible to store and conduct sound. The telephone was electrical, while the gramophone started out as strictly mechanical.
A crank wound up a spring which ran a clockwork motor. A needle at the end of an arm ran in a rotating, serrated groove. The first examples were actually cylindrical. Only later did flat discs become standard. The sound was conducted up the arm, into a horn and out, to be heard by avid listeners. Like some YouTube shorts, the sound level varied. Some ‘records’ had deeper grooves, and the sound level could blast a small room. Pieces of cloth were sometimes stuffed into the horn as a damper – a mute. This is where the phrase, “Put a sock in it!” originated. The best, and the best-known, brand of gramophone was the
VICTROLA
The Victor Talking Machine Company was an American recording company and phonograph manufacturer, incorporated in 1901. The company operated independently until it was purchased by the Radio Corporation of America (RCA) in 1929 and subsequently operated as the RCA Victor Division of the Radio Corporation of America.
Sound reproduction has gone from mechanical, to electric, to electronic, to digital. We have come so far. I wonder how much, and how soon, the future will change and improve it – neural?? We already have Smart Glasses, which transmit sound from the arms, into the bones near your ears.
Veni, Vidi, Victrola






