Folder: Tongue and ear Page 2 of 2

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The heavy listening device Goertz (Czechoslovakia) developed between WWI and WWII.

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Dutch personal horns. Rotating acoustic listening device developed for the Dutch army as part of air defense systems research between World Wars I and II, 1930s.

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German acoustic/optical locator, 1917. A junior officer and an NCO from an unidentified Feldartillerie regiment wearing combined acoustic/optical locating apparatus.

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Japanese ‘War Tuba’ in an air field, 1921. After WWI aircraft detection became increasingly important to warfare. Before radars acoustic amplifiers and mirrors with different designs were used…

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Acoustic listening device developed for the Dutch army as part of air defense systems research between World Wars I and II.

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Athanasius Kircher, Musurgia Universalis (1650) An early example of a plan to build a pansonic device, capable of bringing the sounds from the public space up to the…

xlg_bell_voice_writing

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Writing with your voice, Popular Science (Mar. 1947)

Metadata before digital media.
Wire Recorder Saves Time by Handling Data on Photographs, Popular Mechanics, Dec, 1950
“Photographers who do considerable work in the field can save time by using a wire recorder to keep track of pertinent information. Details and remarks can be recorded in a moment and then edited later when time is available. The recorder is set up in the front seat of the car, and the necessary 110-volt a.c. is supplied by a war-surplus converter carried in the trunk."

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