Cassette Assets

This is a blog post about cassettes, with no mention of the Sony Walkman, except here. The Compact Cassette was developed by a Belgian team of engineers at Philips, and introduced under the Norelco brand in 1963. Two years later, to promote the new format, Philips gave portable cassette decks to EMI for the Beatles to try.

Upstairs at EMI Studio 2, 1965. Engineer Norman “Hurricane” Smith is on the left.

Christmas, 1969, I received a Panasonic RQ-204S cassette deck. It was rugged, with very good sound that could be played loud without breaking up, even at full volume.

I used the Panasonic deck to record WBCN radio and some records, but especially to exchange voice letters with my friend Greg, back in Connecticut. Long distance phone calls were out of the question, but a cassette could be mailed with a couple of stamps.

Norwalk, Connecticut, January, 1969

I first learned about cassettes as a computer software medium upon meeting one of my college roommates, named Brad. Before starting at Westfield State, Brad spent a year aboard the Atlantis II research ship, out of Woods Hole, Massachusetts.

The Atlantis II is best known for hosting the Alvin deep-ocean submarine, and for being used to locate the Titanic. The year when my friend Brad was aboard, scientists were conducting the early research into Continental Drift. I recall the project ended up being featured in National Geographic.

Brad was a math whiz just out of high school, working as a Fortran programmer on the Atlantis II. Cassettes were used to load programs and for data storage. When we met, Brad had a large collection of cassettes from the ship that he had mostly repurposed from data to music, with his very expensive, high-end portable Sony deck. Ten years later, working with Brad at a software company, the sound of the 300 baud modems we used was indistinguishable from what I heard playing data cassettes.

Which brings me to what this blog post is really about — Radiolab’s Mixtape series, and their Cassetternet segment from a month ago. The first part is about cassettes used for software. The second part returns to cassettes as a means of human communication; specifically, their influence in bringing about the Islamic Revolution in Iran.

Joe and Stan Remembered

I took a break from blogging on October 15. The next day would have been Joe Sinnott’s 95th birthday. Having let the occasion get past me, I’ll make up for it now.

This photo was inscribed by Joe to Stan Lee in 2012. Stan kept it in his office until he passed away, three years ago yesterday. Joe first worked for Stan in 1951.

“Stan, you’ve been like a brother to me for 61 years — thanks, Joe Sinnott ’12”
Joe’s tools of his trade — A Winsor & Newton Series 7 #3 brush and a Hunt 102 pen nib. Acquired from the Joe Sinnott estate.

Not a MoMA Too Soon

Neil Gaiman has successfully nudged the Museum of Modern Art into attributing Roy Lichtenstein’s “inspiration” for one of his paintings.

Gaiman also corrected MoMA for giving the wrong comic book title. It’s Secret Hearts, not Secret Love. Presumably, from now on MoMA will properly cite the original comic book issues and artists behind Lichtenstein’s famous works.

Much of the credit for raising awareness goes to fellow Westfield State alum David Barsalou. Decades ago, David began his “Deconstructing Roy Lichtenstein” project, identifying the comic book panels Lichtenstein swiped for all of his Pop-Art paintings.

My Loser Blog

Today’s Doonesbury speaks truth. Not to power, but the powerless.

Remember when people actually thought they could make a living by writing as bloggers? A laughable notion today, but taken seriously by many at the time. As my Contact Doug page has always stated, I have never tried to monetize this site. I wouldn’t have made any money anyway.

As I said before taking my 2-month break to fret over technical woes, the “big” stuff associated with this site happened in its first few years. The end of that period coincided with the time when I joined Facebook in 2009. Once I was on Facebook, it was obvious to me that blogging as a thing was already over.