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Philips also modernized its models: it increased

Posted: Sat Feb 01, 2025 6:39 am
by zakiyatasnim
The opposite of the personal player was the boombox. A portable stereo system with large speakers and loud sound, it appeared in the mid-1970s and became associated with hip-hop culture. The first boomboxes were produced by Panasonic, Sony, Marantz, and GE.

Collecting and nostalgia
In the late 1970s, Philips (including Lou Ottens) and Sony began developing the compact disc and the CD system. In 1982, they introduced their inventions. The disc was 12 cm in diameter. It could have been smaller, but the developers intended the format to hold the entire 74-minute Beethoven's 9th Symphony. From the 1970s to 2000, about 200 billion compact discs were sold.

Ottens said that the time of cassettes was over because iran number data nothing could match the sound of a CD.

With the advent of the CD format, cassettes really began to lose popularity. In 1992, more than half of pre-recorded audio cassettes were sold. Four years later, sales had fallen to a quarter. However, cassettes, like vinyl records, did not disappear, but gradually became a collector's item.

Philips claims that 100 billion cassettes were sold worldwide from the 1960s to 2000. The company no longer produces them.

However, in the 2000s, the cassette format began to regain popularity, along with nostalgia for the 90s. Sales increased by 10-20% per year, and in 2014 and 2015 they increased by 30%.



In 2010, The Wall Street Journal published an article about a new genre of music called Chillwave, a style of 80s pop music that sounded like it was recorded on cassette tape and was meant to be played on it. This style led to a resurgence of interest in cassette tapes.

Journalists also noticed a surge in the popularity of cassettes in 2020. In the UK, sales of cassettes and vinyl records doubled in a year. The three best-selling cassette releases of 2020 were albums by 5 Seconds of Summer, Lady Gaga, and The 1975.

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