The Maui News - Weekender

Inventor of audio cassette dies at 94

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THE HAGUE, Netherland­s — Lou Ottens, the Dutch inventor of the cassette tape, the medium of choice for millions of bedroom mix tapes, has died, said Philips, the company where he also helped develop the compact disc.

Ottens died today at age 94, Philips confirmed.

A structural engineer who trained at the prestigiou­s Technical University in Delft, he joined Philips in 1952 and was head of the Dutch company’s product developmen­t department when he began work on an alternativ­e for existing tape recorders with their cumbersome large spools of tape.

His goal was simple. Make tapes and their players far more portable and easier to use.

“During the developmen­t of the cassette tape, in the early 1960s, he had a wooden block made that fit exactly in his coat pocket,”“said Olga Coolen, director of the Philips Museum in the southern city of Eindhoven. “This was how big the first Compact Cassette was to be, making it a lot handier than the bulky tape recorders in use at the time.”“

The final product created in 1962 later turned into a worldwide hit, with more than 100 billion cassettes sold, many to music fans who would record their own compilatio­ns direct from the radio. Its popularity waned with the developmen­t of the compact disc, an invention Ottens also helped create as supervisor of a developmen­t team, Philips said.

The cassette tape’s success stemmed from its simplicity, Ottens said in an interview.

“It was a breakthrou­gh because it was foolproof,”“he said.

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