Where and how do you begin to tell the story of the PS4 controller? I feel like it should start with the story of Sony.
In 1998, Steve Jobs said βThe whole strategy for Apple now is, if you will, to be the Sony of the computer business.β
archive.fortune.com
In 1998, Steve Jobs said βThe whole strategy for Apple now is, if you will, to be the Sony of the computer business.β
archive.fortune.com
Funny anecdote from sony dot net:
"Whenever Ibuka visited Tachikawa, the whole family would make such a big fuss, saying, "Masaru is here," and they would hide their clocks and other such items so as to prevent Ibuka from tinkering with them." ππ
"Whenever Ibuka visited Tachikawa, the whole family would make such a big fuss, saying, "Masaru is here," and they would hide their clocks and other such items so as to prevent Ibuka from tinkering with them." ππ
From the Founding Prospectus that Masaru drew up in 1946:
a) To establish an ideal factory that stresses a spirit of freedom and open-mindedness, and where engineers with sincere motivation can exercise their technological skills to the highest level
sony.net
a) To establish an ideal factory that stresses a spirit of freedom and open-mindedness, and where engineers with sincere motivation can exercise their technological skills to the highest level
sony.net
"The days of radios with cords are over."
"The TR-55 served as the template for almost all the portable gadgets we use today. Everything from the iPod to the Game Boy can trace its basic handheld design to the TR-55's form factor."
wired.com
"The TR-55 served as the template for almost all the portable gadgets we use today. Everything from the iPod to the Game Boy can trace its basic handheld design to the TR-55's form factor."
wired.com
(I'm skipping over tonnes of history and details here. There were all sorts of ups and downs. At some point Sony tried to do a life insurance company, which didn't really work out. I'm not really grokking the nuances of Masaru and Akio's leadership transition. Pls forgive gaps)
Anyway, after the TR-55, the next major breakthrough product from Sony was the 13-inch Trinitron, released in 1968 globaltechnologies.ca
The Trinitron was so good, it won an Emmy. Seriously! There's a bunch of interesting technical detail that goes into this that I'm not going to get into, but you can check those out in a cool video here: youtube.com (h/t @hyperstitional)
In 1975, Sony got embroiled in the Videotape Format War, which I could do an entire separate thread about. Sony made Betamax, which was higher quality but could only play 1hr per cassette. @engineerguytwit (great writer!) argues compellingly that VHS won by optimizing for rentals
According to EuroGamer, Ken was unusually brash & outspoken, which endeared him to Ohga (who, if you remember, was himself a writer of angry letters). Watching his daughter play on her Famicom (NES) convinced Ken that gaming was the next big thing eurogamer.net
Relatedly, I remember being very entertained by this simple and revealing video of how analog sticks work. This talks about the N64 stick, but really all joysticks basically work this way. You can see people remove PS4 thumbsticks on YouTube, it's the same
Anyway, I think that's all the juice I have for this particular thread! Every time I pick up my PS4 controller now, I'm going to think of how Nintendo betrayed Sony. If you liked this thread & want others like this, go through this list of objects and vote
and here are a bunch of existing threads you can go spelunking in
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