That's sad. I like keeping lots of old type equipment--just in case forgotten tapes and media are found--so we have something to play them
I think he simply looks at it with different eyes than users or audiophiles do. I can't know for certain, of course, but the 'vibe' I got from him is that at age 91 and long since retired, he still is the quintessential inventor in attitude, looking back at his invention without nostalgia, with no other passion than to wish to improve existing technology. I liked about him that he was perfectly fine with the idea that 'his' cassette, once used by hundreds of millions of people, was mainly a thing of the past now and that he didn't try to cling to its former 'glory'. Just as he was saying about himself, by the way: 'My time has past as well, new people have taken my place, and shortly I will disappear altogether. That's perfectly all right; it is how things go.'
He admitted that he was proud of his invention, though.
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