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![]() Lucky wrote: "John S." wrote in message oups.com... Joe Analssandrini wrote: Dear John, Do you realize just how much $49.95 was in 1955? It's amazing what has been accomplished in electronics in the last fifty years, both in regard to product and price, not even to mention reliability. Best, Joe I know...$49.95 was a lot, but according to Reid, it was still less than comparable tube based portables. I remember listening to the 1959 Dodgers using a Sony transistor and an earplug. And to think we can buy Radio Shack Color Radios for $5.00 And yes, reliability of electronic products combined with low cost is such that repair shops are fast disappearing. I remember when the first TI LED display handheld calculators were distributed in my office in 1971. At a price of $200.00 they were inventoried and depreciated! Hi John and guys I remember when VCR's and DVD players first came out. They were like $1000. Now you not only can buy one for $40, they are on there way out. Technology is like a commodity actually. When it comes out, it's new technology "technically" speaking. But once it's marketed to the masses, it becomes a commodity "technically" speaking. It will be the same with plasma T.V.s Once like $20k, prices have come down a lot. In a few years you'll be able to buy one much, much cheaper. I want one! Oh, yeah, I remember when the Sony Betamax came out and one of my neighbors, being an early adopter of technology was willing to shell out $1K for that box. I waited until 1986 or so and paid the princely sum of $125.00 or so. I'll wait for the high res big screen TV's to drop in price, as they certainly will when the volume gets up enough to allow price cutting. When the IC first came out in 1960 or so, it cost about 3x more than a standard circuit so it looked like it would never be cost effective. It took the unlimited budgets of the space program to fund development of efficient production lines and drop the cost per IC. Largely because of cost IBM didn't switch from wire-based core memory to chip memory until almost to 1970. By then the IC was making headway in many consumer products largely due to a lot of government funded R&D. |
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