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Technics (テクニクス, Tekunikusu) is a Japanese audio brand established by Matsushita Electric (now Panasonic) in 1965. Since 1965, Matsushita has produced a variety of HiFi and other audio products under the brand name, such as turntables , amplifiers , radio receivers , tape recorders , CD players , loudspeakers , and digital pianos .
The Technics SL-1200 [1] is a series of direct-drive turntables manufactured from October 1972 to 2010, with production resuming in 2016, by Matsushita Electric (now Panasonic Corporation) under the brand name of Technics. The S and L stand for "stereo" and "player" respectively.
The SL-10 was the first linear-tracking turntable to feature direct drive, a Technics innovation dating back to 1969 with the SP-10 Mk I. The SL-10, along with its fully programmable stablemate the SL-15, was able to penetrate the consumer electronics market much more effectively than any preceding linear-tracking turntable, and it spawned a wave of imitators throughout the 1980s, along with ...
The Technics SL-J2 is a quartz-controlled direct-drive fully automatic turntable system produced by Technics between 1984 and 1988. It features a linear tracking tonearm with an optical sensor that allows for the kind of track-skipping more typical of CD players. The sensor also detects the size of the record sitting on the platter (7-inch, 10 ...
An Audio-Technica AT815a shotgun microphone An Audio-Technica AT95E moving magnet phono cartridge AT3035 microphone. One of their most famous products was a battery-operated, portable record player called Mister Disc that was sold in the US in the early 1980s.
Championships were sponsored internationally by Technics, but in 2010 Technics was replaced by Serato and Rane. [4] Since 2011, the vinyl emulation software Serato Scratch Live can be used during the competition in addition to traditional vinyl. [4] [5] The first championship, held in the London Hippodrome in 1985, was won by Londoner Roger ...
The A.C. Nielsen company, which continues to measure television ratings today, took over American radio's ratings beginning with the 1949–50 radio season and ending in 1955–56. [40] During this era, nearly all of radio's most popular programs were broadcast on one of three networks: NBC Red, NBC Blue, or CBS' Columbia network.
For 2006, $9.6 billion of revenue came from the Americas (Canada, Latin America, and the United States); $6.4 billion from Europe, Middle East, and Africa; $1.5 billion from Asia-Pacific; Services' revenue was: Infrastructure $12 billion, Applications Software $5.9 billion, Business Process Outsourcing $3 billion and all other $421 million.