Back in 1979, Sony cofounder Masaru Ibuka was looking for a way to listen to classical music on long-haul flights. In ...
For the next three decades, the Japanese company emerged as a household name in consumer electronics, producing iconic ...
Ah, the 1980s—a time of neon colors, cassette tapes, and some of the most bizarre yet beloved gadgets that defined […] ...
Effortlessly convert your cherished cassette tapes into digital MP3 files with our Walkman cassette player. Included in the package is a 16GB SD card and SD card reader for seamless storage.
Opinions expressed by Forbes Contributors are their own. First it was vinyl, and now it’s cassettes that all the cool kids want, as nostalgia takes over the music world. It seems both those ...
This solid-looking update of the classic Walkman form factor doesn’t quite match up to the technical wonders of the earlier era, when players could be literally the same size as a cassette case. The ...
In 1979, Sony introduced the Walkman, a small, lightweight and belt-worn audio cassette player that let a person comfortably listen to music via headphones while walking or running. The progenitor ...
The long history of the Walkman is taking a new twist with the first Android-enabled PMP. The Sony Z-Series Walkman with Android will be out in February Sony's iconic Walkman player has always ...
For the next three decades, the Japanese company emerged as a household name in consumer electronics, producing iconic devices from the Trinitron color TV in 1968 to the Walkman cassette player in ...