Amana Radarange
Is not it true that our life and it seems impossible without a series of electronics? Well, not so long ago are with us, look at this list and remember the first steps of these new companions. 1. RCA TV, model 630TS (1946): With a 10 inch black and white, and huge speakers to the sides, this was the first mass-produced television. 3. Kodak Brownie Camera 127 (1953): The first Brownie camera model was 1900, and in the fifties and was present at every party or family outing worth his salt. 4. Video Camera Bell & Howell Director, Series, Model 414 8-mm Zoomatic (about 1962): The eight-millimeter cameras allowed, since 1932, that videotape is not only a matter of the film industry. But none were as famous as the Bell & Howll. 5. Amana Microwave Radarange (1967): Since the invention of the refrigerator, modern lnuestra nothing has changed so much food and our kitchen as the microwave. This model was seen to stop luxury item. 6. Videocassette recorder JVC HR-3300 (1976): The first VHS recorder to the market, allowing us to not only record a movie for viewing later, but fast forward or rewind. 10. Mobile Phone Motorola Star Tac (1996): Before this model, cell phones are more portable, bricks that people had in the car, not over. Now not only could carry and were fashionable. Uff than memories, I remember Walkman, Video Cassette and many others who were my era, remember the Motorola Brick . . Uff that larger cell hehe . . Most things are named and exixtian when born, so it's hard to imagine the world without them. But it is great to look back and realize that we have experienced the evolution of the great inventions that have made life easier. But more amazing is that despite all this still exists the possibility of wonder. . . Always communicate. The Altamira bison are from 15,000 to 12,000 years BC and always exaggerate. Here they said: Look at the piece of bison that grip!. However, at the beginning, Bakelite was used to "imitiar to" to imitate marble, wood or tortoiseshell. And no one liked. Until he took over as plastic. And so began the revolution in plastics. Television "replaces" the radio. Television "mimics" the radio. The radio "replaces" the newspaper La radio "mimics" the newspaper MEDIA WHAT IS NEW?. August 24, 2006 From The Economist print edition One of the most useful conventional media is disappearing. One cause for concern but not panic. "Of all the" old media ", the newspapers are the most to lose from the Internet. Circulation has been falling for decades in the United States, Europe, Latin America, Australia and New Zealand. . . . Even the most cynical of the media barons can not deny the way that young people increasingly get their news online. Britons aged between 15 and 24 spend about 30% less time reading national newspapers once they start using the Web. " ALWAYS SOMETHING IS DYING. Find content and business models that serve and work in new media. Replicate the experience in one device X The same experience is not necessarily the same content Replicate the mobile experience in a CHALLENGE. "Whatever it is today as odd, ugly, uncomfortable or unpleasant to a new environment, security becomes your signature. The distortion of the CD, the vibration of digital video, bad sound of the 8-bit, all this will be appreciated and emulated as soon as possible be avoided. " AS OF YESTERDAY IS TODAY. KODAK BROWNIE CAMERA 127 (1953) RCA 630TS TV MODEL (1946) U $ S 350 (U $ S 3600 today) BELL & HOWELL DIRECTOR SERIES 414 MOVIE CAMERA 8-MM (c. 1962) WESTERN ELECTRIC DESK TELEPHONE 500 (1949) AMANA MICROWAVE Radarange (1967) WHAT IS A "DEVICE X"?. KODAK BROWNIE CAMERA 127 (1953) RCA 630TS TV MODEL (1946) U $ S 350 (U $ S 3600 today) BELL & HOWELL DIRECTOR SERIES 414 MOVIE CAMERA 8-MM (c. 1962) WESTERN ELECTRIC DESK TELEPHONE 500 (1949) AMANA MICROWAVE Radarange (1967) WHAT IS A "DEVICE X"?. How will consume our media? How do we transfer the experience and not the content? What will they want to consume? When will we do with the phone Pororo? What will consume our media in the future? CONCLUSIONS: Neither the faintest idea. SlideShare is the world's largest community for sharing presentations. Upload and share on blogs, Twitter, Facebook or LinkedIn. Over 60 million people use SlideShare Every Month for research, sharing ideas, Connecting with Others, and Generating business leads. SlideShare Also Supports documents, PDFs, and videos. . . .