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Whistleblower

Joined: 03 Feb 2007
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Posted: Mon Mar 10, 2008 2:57 am Post subject: Koreans Invented the MP3 |
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I was reading the news today and Koreans now claim that they invented the first MP3 device. Is this true or false? I shall let you decide.
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10 years ago, Koreans created the MP3 player
March 10, 2008
Given the presence of MP3 players virtually everywhere these days, it may seem odd that the coming-out party for the world�s first such player ended up in failure back in March 1998.
Then an oddity, the first MP3 player was made by a small Korean tech start-up company called Saehan Information Systems, which is now defunct. The MPman F10 hardly caused a ripple when it was seen for the first time at one of the Korean booths at the annual CeBIT product fair in Hanover, Germany. No one was quite sure what it was.
�No matter how the Korean staff tried to explain what an MP3 player was, people didn�t understand why they needed such a device because they could listen to music with CDs or cassettes. A few people accepted the MP3 player as something cool, but most people didn�t take it seriously,� said JR Bum, the vice president of local tech company MPIXAR, and an old hand who was around MP3 players in their early days.
No one then thought that the MP3 player would become a flagship portable music device, as ubiquitous as the earlier Walkman, and, through the iPod, one of the icons of the digital age. Currently, more than 150 million players are sold every year worldwide.
Despite its disappointing debut, Korean venture companies tried their hand at the new portable music device after Saehan put its prototype into mass production in May 1998.
A couple of other early generation MP3 players were also produced by companies here, including Digital Way, where Bum worked at the time.
In October 1998, Samsung Electronics, the nation�s largest electronics maker, ordered MP3 players from Digital Way and sold them under the Samsung name.
Even though the very first MP3 player only played about 10 songs, Korean companies quickly developed the players into multipurpose gadgets that could function as radios, dictionaries and video players.
A Korean MP3 player produced by Reigncom, was even called the future of digital life by Bill Gates, the founder of Microsoft, during his keynote address at the Consumer Electronics Show at Las Vegas in January 2005.
However, as Apple launched the iPod nano the same year, and cheap MP3 players from China soon flooded the market, Korean MP3 player manufacturers, which once had a shining vision of the future, staggered.
Asked about the downfall of Korean MP3 players in the world market, Bum said: �MP3 players were made by the nation�s venture companies, who knew how to make them but did not have the money and power to promote the gadgets in the global market.
�Samsung joined the MP3 player market, but its priority was other audio goods, not MP3 players.�
To put it simply, Korea was sandwiched between Apple�s sleek and stylish iPods and cheap Chinese MP3 players.
With the advent of the iPod, Korean MP3 players, including the much-heralded Reigncom, went downhill.
To make matters worse, Korea�s high-end and ever-changing mobile phones have evolved into all-around gadgets as they play music, video clips and take pictures. This has decreased local demand for MP3 players.
�More than 99 percent of local mobile phones now have MP3 player functions, so people don�t need to buy MP3 players unless they are really into music,� Kim Se-hoon, an official from Samsung Electronics, said.
After suffering from harsh competition with the U.S. and China, however, local MP3 players are showing signs of rebounding.
Reigncom turned a profit in 2007 for the first time in three years as it reported a 59 percent growth in sales from a year ago with growing demand for a Mickey Mouse-shaped MP3 player called the M Player with a price tag of just 55,000 won ($5 .
Samsung has also set its sights on selling more than 8 million MP3 players this year. That�s because manufacturers believe the devices still have a high potential even though they have been around for 10 years.
�MP3 players are still not as widespread as CD players and Walkmans were because only people with access to computers can use MP3 players. In that sense, the MP3 market is still lucrative and Korean MP3 players are trying to compete,� Bum said.
By Sung So-young Staff Reporter [[email protected]] |
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reactionary
Joined: 22 Oct 2006 Location: korreia
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Posted: Mon Mar 10, 2008 3:22 am Post subject: |
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i only remember the rio as being the first that people were using. |
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seoulsucker

Joined: 05 Mar 2006 Location: The Land of the Hesitant Cutoff
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Posted: Mon Mar 10, 2008 5:06 am Post subject: Re: Koreans Invented the MP3 |
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Whistleblower wrote: |
No one then thought that the MP3 player would become a flagship portable music device, as ubiquitous as the earlier Walkman, and, through the iPod, one of the icons of the digital age. Currently, more than 150 million players are sold every year worldwide. |
[/quote]
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Typhoon
Joined: 29 May 2007 Location: Daejeon
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Posted: Mon Mar 10, 2008 5:20 am Post subject: |
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I have also heard that Korean's invented golf (King Sejong). This was on Sponge. Koreans invented the 1st airplane, but the guy who invented was a little crazy so no one believed him at the time, but they still invented it according to Koreans. This was also on Sponge and in a couple of history books. Koreans invented the best printing press in the history of the world in the 1300s. When I asked if it was better than a photocopier my students laughed kind of nevously. Let me think. What else has the glorious nation of the Han created, but have had stolen by evil foreigners? There must be more, but I am drawing a blank. |
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bejarano-korea

Joined: 13 Dec 2006
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Posted: Mon Mar 10, 2008 5:22 am Post subject: |
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Typhoon wrote: |
I have also heard that Korean's invented golf (King Sejong). This was on Sponge. Koreans invented the 1st airplane, but the guy who invented was a little crazy so no one believed him at the time, but they still invented it according to Koreans. This was also on Sponge and in a couple of history books. Koreans invented the best printing press in the history of the world in the 1300s. When I asked if it was better than a photocopier my students laughed kind of nevously. Let me think. What else has the glorious nation of the Han created, but have had stolen by evil foreigners? There must be more, but I am drawing a blank. |
Coat Hangers
Turtle Boats
If the Koreans really did invent the mp3 then we would all bloody well know about it!  |
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bellum99

Joined: 23 Jan 2003 Location: don't need to know
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Posted: Mon Mar 10, 2008 6:24 am Post subject: |
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The History of mp3
Early 1970s: Prof. Dieter Seitzer of Erlangen-Nuremberg University in Germany begins wrestling with the problem of compressing music over phone lines. Initially refused research money to pursue the goal, he establishes a group of technicians and scientists interested in audio coding research to tackle the problem
1979: Prof. Seitzer's team develops a first digital signal processor capable of audio compression. During subsequent development, a student of Prof. Seitzer, Karlheinz Brandenburg, developed and enhanced basic principles for perceptual audio coding exploiting the hearing properties of the human ear as described in psychoacoustics. Under Seitzer's guidance, Brandenburg and the team continuously developed a number of coding algorithms.
1987: In 1987 a research alliance is formed between Erlangen-Nuremberg University and the Fraunhofer Institute for Integrated Circuits within the framework of the European Union-funded EUREKA project EU147 for Digital Audio Broadcasting (DAB). Led by Fraunhofer's Prof. Heinz Gerhaeuser, the joint research project takes an important next step. With the LC-ATC (Low Complexity Adaptive Transform Coding) algorithm as the basis for its research, the joint venture began building a working real-time codec using multiple digital signal processors (DSPs). The hardware system, based on multiple DSP modules and a number of audio and data I/O interface cards, was developed from scratch by a team of scientists that included Harald Popp and Ernst Eberlein. Until now LC-ATC existed only as a simulation on minicomputers and could be tested only with very limited amount of audio material (a few audio excerpts) due to the high computation time needed. The real-time codec would enable testing of LC-ATC under real-world conditions and allow for significant additional algorithmic optimizations.
1989: Brandenburg finishes his doctoral thesis on the OCF (Optimum Coding in (the) Frequency Domain) algorithm, described by Fraunhofer as exhibiting "many of characteristics of the eventual MP3 coder, including a high frequency resolution filterbank, non-uniform quantization, Huffman coding, and side information structure." Fraunhofer contends that "the OCF coder is considered a breakthrough at that time and is a precursor of MP3." OCF scanned and removed sound below or above the threshold for human hearing. The software part of the real-time system for OCF was mainly driven by Bernhard Grill under the lead of Gerhaeuser.
1991: Incorporating contributions by Hannover University, AT&T, and Thomson, the Fraunhofer team improved the OCF algorithm which yields a powerful new audio codec called ASPEC (Adaptive Spectral Perceptual Entropy Coding). ASPEC was proposed for the forthcoming MPEG audio standard which started in 1988. MPEG in total received 14 proposals and encouraged the participants to merge their contributions, ending in four proposals which included ASPEC and MUSICAM. After formal tests MPEG encouraged MUSICAM and ASPEC to merge to create a family of three coding schemes, where Layer I was a low complexity variant of MUSICAM, Layer II was a optimized version of MUSICAM and Layer III was mainly based on ASPEC. Due to its lower complexity, DAB selected Layer II as the audio format for its digital audio broadcasting services. Although Fraunhofer's ASPEC complexity was higher, the codec provided the highest coding efficiency and therefore was the key to transmit high quality audio via ISDN phone lines. As proof of concept, Fraunhofer manufactured and sold a small number of the ASPEC studio equipment (19" racks) to professional users such as several radio stations. As a first application it was successfully used to transmit music reliably via ISDN between broadcasting studios.
The evolution from ASPEC to the final MP3 (MPEG-1, Layer 3) codec included some technological harmonizations with the other planned MPEG-1 audio coders (such as MPEG-1, Layer 2's polyphasefilterbank) and the addition of joint stereo coding, which allows the coder to not only perform well on monophonic signals but also to efficiently handle stereo material. The latter was developed by Juergen Herre for MP3.
1992: The Moving Picture Experts Group (MPEG), the ISO (International Organization of Standardization) working group charged with developing compressed digital audio and video standards, concludes a first compression standard called MPEG-1 for use in video CDs (CD-I) . In its audio section, a generic family of three codec formats (Layer-1, -2, -3) is specified. Layer 3 is a more efficient codec and leads to its widespread adoption as a way to store music on the relatively small hard disk drives of the era's PCs and to transfer music files over the Internet through pokey 28.8kbps PC modems.
1995: MP3 gets its name. In an internal poll, Fraunhofer researchers unanimously vote for .mp3 as the file-name extension for MPEG Layer 3. MPEG Layer-3 is also selected as the audio format for the WorldSpace satellite digital audio broadcasting system.
1998: The era of MP3 portability began with the introduction of Diamond Multimedia's Rio in the U.S. and Saehan Information Systems's MPMAN in Korea. They are the first headphone stereos that used solid-state flash memory to store and play compressed MP3 music files, either downloaded from the Internet or "ripped" from a music CD. The ensuing popularity of MP3 portables led dozens of companies to offer compressed-music portables, and it led to the development of additional audio codecs for use in PCs and in portable devices.
2000: In the U.S., suppliers launch the first headphone stereos equipped with hard drives and the first headphone CD players that play MP3-encoded 5-inch CDs.
Since that time, mp3 has become a cultural phenomenon, with hundreds of millions of computers and consumer electronic devices sold that include mp3 capability.
The ability to store thousands of songs on a small portable player, search them by Album, Artist, Title, Genre, or even have play lists generated automatically, has reawakened millions of people's love for music. You no longer have to find a misplaced CD to hear a song you haven't heard for years. Your whole collection is now available at the press of a button. In fact, inexpensive 40GB mp3 players can hold over 16,000 CD quality songs, ready for immediate play, wherever you are - at home, at the beach, in your car, in the train, on the plane.
mp3 is more than a technology. It is a sensational development that has reconnected musicians to music lovers, speakers to their listeners, creators to their audience. |
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Davew125
Joined: 11 Mar 2007
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Posted: Mon Mar 10, 2008 6:47 am Post subject: |
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I've been reliably informed by some co workers that both acupuncture and karaoke are Korean inventions as well, who'd a thought it eh?? |
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laogaiguk

Joined: 06 Dec 2005 Location: somewhere in Korea
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Posted: Mon Mar 10, 2008 6:50 am Post subject: |
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"The details of my life are quite inconsequential... very well, where do I begin? My father was a relentlessly self-improving boulangerie owner from Belgium with low grade narcolepsy and a penchant for buggery. My mother was a fifteen year old French prostitute named Chloe with webbed feet. My father would womanize, he would drink. He would make outrageous claims like he invented the question mark. Sometimes he would accuse chestnuts of being lazy. The sort of general malaise that only the genius possess and the insane lament." |
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Donkey Beer

Joined: 20 Jul 2006
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Posted: Mon Mar 10, 2008 7:24 am Post subject: |
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So to sum things up for those that could not be bothered to sift through the minutia- Koreans did in fact invent MP3.
The cleverness of Samsung never ceases to amaze me.
bellum99 wrote: |
The History of mp3
Early 1970s: Prof. Dieter Seitzer of Erlangen-Nuremberg University in Germany begins wrestling with the problem of compressing music over phone lines. Initially refused research money to pursue the goal, he establishes a group of technicians and scientists interested in audio coding research to tackle the problem
1979: Prof. Seitzer's team develops a first digital signal processor capable of audio compression. During subsequent development, a student of Prof. Seitzer, Karlheinz Brandenburg, developed and enhanced basic principles for perceptual audio coding exploiting the hearing properties of the human ear as described in psychoacoustics. Under Seitzer's guidance, Brandenburg and the team continuously developed a number of coding algorithms.
1987: In 1987 a research alliance is formed between Erlangen-Nuremberg University and the Fraunhofer Institute for Integrated Circuits within the framework of the European Union-funded EUREKA project EU147 for Digital Audio Broadcasting (DAB). Led by Fraunhofer's Prof. Heinz Gerhaeuser, the joint research project takes an important next step. With the LC-ATC (Low Complexity Adaptive Transform Coding) algorithm as the basis for its research, the joint venture began building a working real-time codec using multiple digital signal processors (DSPs). The hardware system, based on multiple DSP modules and a number of audio and data I/O interface cards, was developed from scratch by a team of scientists that included Harald Popp and Ernst Eberlein. Until now LC-ATC existed only as a simulation on minicomputers and could be tested only with very limited amount of audio material (a few audio excerpts) due to the high computation time needed. The real-time codec would enable testing of LC-ATC under real-world conditions and allow for significant additional algorithmic optimizations.
1989: Brandenburg finishes his doctoral thesis on the OCF (Optimum Coding in (the) Frequency Domain) algorithm, described by Fraunhofer as exhibiting "many of characteristics of the eventual MP3 coder, including a high frequency resolution filterbank, non-uniform quantization, Huffman coding, and side information structure." Fraunhofer contends that "the OCF coder is considered a breakthrough at that time and is a precursor of MP3." OCF scanned and removed sound below or above the threshold for human hearing. The software part of the real-time system for OCF was mainly driven by Bernhard Grill under the lead of Gerhaeuser.
1991: Incorporating contributions by Hannover University, AT&T, and Thomson, the Fraunhofer team improved the OCF algorithm which yields a powerful new audio codec called ASPEC (Adaptive Spectral Perceptual Entropy Coding). ASPEC was proposed for the forthcoming MPEG audio standard which started in 1988. MPEG in total received 14 proposals and encouraged the participants to merge their contributions, ending in four proposals which included ASPEC and MUSICAM. After formal tests MPEG encouraged MUSICAM and ASPEC to merge to create a family of three coding schemes, where Layer I was a low complexity variant of MUSICAM, Layer II was a optimized version of MUSICAM and Layer III was mainly based on ASPEC. Due to its lower complexity, DAB selected Layer II as the audio format for its digital audio broadcasting services. Although Fraunhofer's ASPEC complexity was higher, the codec provided the highest coding efficiency and therefore was the key to transmit high quality audio via ISDN phone lines. As proof of concept, Fraunhofer manufactured and sold a small number of the ASPEC studio equipment (19" racks) to professional users such as several radio stations. As a first application it was successfully used to transmit music reliably via ISDN between broadcasting studios.
The evolution from ASPEC to the final MP3 (MPEG-1, Layer 3) codec included some technological harmonizations with the other planned MPEG-1 audio coders (such as MPEG-1, Layer 2's polyphasefilterbank) and the addition of joint stereo coding, which allows the coder to not only perform well on monophonic signals but also to efficiently handle stereo material. The latter was developed by Juergen Herre for MP3.
1992: The Moving Picture Experts Group (MPEG), the ISO (International Organization of Standardization) working group charged with developing compressed digital audio and video standards, concludes a first compression standard called MPEG-1 for use in video CDs (CD-I) . In its audio section, a generic family of three codec formats (Layer-1, -2, -3) is specified. Layer 3 is a more efficient codec and leads to its widespread adoption as a way to store music on the relatively small hard disk drives of the era's PCs and to transfer music files over the Internet through pokey 28.8kbps PC modems.
1995: MP3 gets its name. In an internal poll, Fraunhofer researchers unanimously vote for .mp3 as the file-name extension for MPEG Layer 3. MPEG Layer-3 is also selected as the audio format for the WorldSpace satellite digital audio broadcasting system.
1998: The era of MP3 portability began with the introduction of Diamond Multimedia's Rio in the U.S. and Saehan Information Systems's MPMAN in Korea. They are the first headphone stereos that used solid-state flash memory to store and play compressed MP3 music files, either downloaded from the Internet or "ripped" from a music CD. The ensuing popularity of MP3 portables led dozens of companies to offer compressed-music portables, and it led to the development of additional audio codecs for use in PCs and in portable devices.
2000: In the U.S., suppliers launch the first headphone stereos equipped with hard drives and the first headphone CD players that play MP3-encoded 5-inch CDs.
Since that time, mp3 has become a cultural phenomenon, with hundreds of millions of computers and consumer electronic devices sold that include mp3 capability.
The ability to store thousands of songs on a small portable player, search them by Album, Artist, Title, Genre, or even have play lists generated automatically, has reawakened millions of people's love for music. You no longer have to find a misplaced CD to hear a song you haven't heard for years. Your whole collection is now available at the press of a button. In fact, inexpensive 40GB mp3 players can hold over 16,000 CD quality songs, ready for immediate play, wherever you are - at home, at the beach, in your car, in the train, on the plane.
mp3 is more than a technology. It is a sensational development that has reconnected musicians to music lovers, speakers to their listeners, creators to their audience. |
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laogaiguk

Joined: 06 Dec 2005 Location: somewhere in Korea
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Posted: Mon Mar 10, 2008 7:30 am Post subject: |
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Donkey Beer wrote: |
So to sum things up for those that could not be bothered to sift through the minutia- Koreans did in fact invent MP3.
The cleverness of Samsung never ceases to amaze me.
uote] |
No, they invented one of the first MP3 players, not MP3. Big difference. |
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Lekker

Joined: 09 Feb 2008 Location: Seoul
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Posted: Mon Mar 10, 2008 7:56 am Post subject: |
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Rim my a$$. |
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Donkey Beer

Joined: 20 Jul 2006
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Posted: Mon Mar 10, 2008 8:07 pm Post subject: |
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Wow, i didn't know that Korea also invented the computer. These people never cease to amaze me with their innovation.
laogaiguk wrote: |
Donkey Beer wrote: |
So to sum things up for those that could not be bothered to sift through the minutia- Koreans did in fact invent MP3.
The cleverness of Samsung never ceases to amaze me.
uote] |
No, they invented one of the first MP3 players |
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The Grumpy Senator

Joined: 13 Jan 2008 Location: Up and down the 6 line
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Posted: Mon Mar 10, 2008 8:11 pm Post subject: |
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And Columbus discovered America. |
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Underwaterbob

Joined: 08 Jan 2005 Location: In Cognito
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Posted: Mon Mar 10, 2008 8:39 pm Post subject: |
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In the mid-nineties my friend bought my old Pentium 75, stripped it down and put it in his trunk. He rigged it to boot up and run winamp and had all the controls mapped to a number-pad on the transmission hump. It was definitely the coolest thing ever at the time. This has little relevance in this thread. |
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bellum99

Joined: 23 Jan 2003 Location: don't need to know
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Posted: Mon Mar 10, 2008 9:01 pm Post subject: |
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Underwaterbob wrote: |
In the mid-nineties my friend bought my old Pentium 75, stripped it down and put it in his trunk. He rigged it to boot up and run winamp and had all the controls mapped to a number-pad on the transmission hump. It was definitely the coolest thing ever at the time. This has little relevance in this thread. |
That is cool. I saw a playstation one rigged like that a long time ago. That was also great. My post is also off-topic and I don't care.  |
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