Lou Ottens, the inventor of the cassette tape, is no more
[GTranslate]Lou Ottens, the inventor of the tape that inspired music lovers around the world to listen to the first compact cassette with the touch of modern technology, is no more. Dutch media reported that he has passed away on March 8 and was 94 years old at the time of his death.
Lou Ottens worked for Philips, a Dutch electronics maker. While working there, he began making cassette tapes in the early 1970s. The news agency NPR reported that he wanted to create a way to make music accessible and accessible to all. Because the reel-to-reel tape of that time was much larger in size.
Initially, he created a prototype or experimental version of wood that he carried in his pocket. It helped me to understand what his invention was all about.
The invention of Lou Ottens persuaded the workplace Phillips to give free licenses to other organizations. In 1973, Philips introduced the first compact cassette. The rest is history. But that is not the end of Ottens’ career. Philips and the Japanese company also helped Sony make a compact disc (CD).
Those who were born in the last century know the importance of cassette tapes in listening to music. Without cassettes, things like mixtapes and playlists wouldn’t have bothered people. Bigger than that, the invention of the cassette tape made it possible to carry a music listening device.
In an interview with Time Magazine on the 50th anniversary of the invention of the cassette in 2013, Lou Ottens described the compact cassette as a “sensational” thing.
In fact, it was a sensational thing, and that’s why Phillips Museum Director Olga Coolen said, “Lou was an extraordinary man who loved technology, even as his inventions had humble beginnings.”
Born in 1926, the inventor created the radio for his family during World War II, which had a directional antenna, so that people could listen to music despite the Nazis’ technological jamming.
Jack Taylor, creator of the documentary, ‘Cassette: A Documentary Mixtape’, says, “Cassettes taught us how to use our voice, even when the message came from someone else’s songs, compiled painstakingly on a mixtape.” That is why cassette tapes are becoming popular again in this age of the internet. And that is just the manifestation of such nostalgia!