[Nfb-history] {Disarmed} FW: Posts from Fred's Head from APH for 03/31/2017

Michael Freholm mfreholm at rocketmail.com
Fri Mar 31 19:58:13 UTC 2017


Good one Robert.

Sent from my iPhone

> On Mar 31, 2017, at 12:43 PM, rjaquiss via Nfb-history <nfb-history at nfbnet.org> wrote:
> 
> Hello:
>  
>      I thought you would find this Fred’s Head article about the Clarke and Smith talking book machine from the UK of interest.
>  
> Regards,
>  
> Robert
>  
>  
> From: Fred's Head from APH [mailto:fredshead=aph.org at mail221.atl101.mcdlv.net] On Behalf Of Fred's Head from APH
> Sent: Friday, March 31, 2017 6:05 AM
> To: =?utf-8?Q??=
> Subject: Posts from Fred's Head from APH for 03/31/2017
>  
> The latest blog posts from Fred's Head from APH, a Blindness Blog.
> View this email in your browser
> 
> Updates from http://www.fredshead.info/
> Fred’s Head from APH, a Blindness Blog
> 
> 
> In the 03/31/2017 edition:
> 
> Clarke & Smith Model 2048 “Tapette” Talking Book Machine
>  
> Clarke & Smith Model 2048 “Tapette” Talking Book Machine
> By Paul Ferrara on Mar 30, 2017 01:32 pm
> 
> 
>  
> 
> John Clarke and Alec Smith founded a radio repair company after WWII in Surrey, England.  They developed an early cassette based talking book machine in the 1950s.  Their half inch metal cassette was bulky and heavy and the player weighed over six pounds even without it!  But the idea was innovative and one step on the road to the modern cassette form of the 1970s.   The Royal National Institute for the Blind announced in 1960 that its talking book program would switch over from vinyl disk to the C&S cassette.  This machine, using a lighter, smaller plastic version of the C&S cassette was introduced in 1967.  These were used in Britain and the Commonwealth but never in the U.S. (We have included two photos. First photo caption:
> The green plastic “Tapette” was 6 x 9 x 10” and had its simple controls on top. Caption for second photo: Black plastic “Tapette” cartridge and a black vinyl mailing pouch.)
> Micheal A. Hudson
> Museum Director
> American Printing House for the Blind
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