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Communications Technology

The Ampex Sign Is Coming Down (fastcompany.com) 153

harrymcc writes: If you ever watched anything on videotape, you have Silicon Valley pioneer Ampex -- which invented the technology -- to thank. And for years, the company's vintage sign has stood alongside Highway 101 as a tribute to its historical significance. But Stanford University, which owns the land the sign sits on, is in the process of dismantling it -- an act which Redwood City could have prevented but didn't. I wrote about this dismaying example of cultural shortsightedness at Fast Company.
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The Ampex Sign Is Coming Down

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  • by hackertourist ( 2202674 ) on Friday August 17, 2018 @06:28AM (#57142544)

    is a vast overestimate of the sign's importance. It's nothing more than a bloody advertisement, and we need fewer ads in our life, not more.

    • Few people probably know about Ampex anyway. The sign is hardly a landmark of cultural significance like the Hollywood sign... and even that almost fell victim to neglect.
      • by Tx ( 96709 )

        I can see that the company itself has historical significance, but it still exists, and FTA "The Ampex sign is going into storage in case somebody wants it. (The current incarnation of Ampex wasn’t interested.)". If Ampex itself isn't interested in the sign, then it's indeed probably time to let it go.

        • by Sique ( 173459 )
          If a sign is a landmark, it's value lies in the fact, that it marks a certain land. If you remove it from the land it stands on, it loses the very property that makes it valuabe. So I can understand AMPEX that they don't want the disassembled sign on their premises, as there it is just a disassembled sign, not a landmark.
      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • Even if they don't, people *should* know about Ampex. Especially if they're engineers in Silicon Valley. History is important.

    • If I had mod points I would mod you up. It's a fucking sign, not some precious landmark. Maybe people in the "biz" actually knew what it was about, but to me it's just another garish glowing sign blocking the view.
      • by Sique ( 173459 )
        To be a sign doesn't exclude the possibility to be a landmark.

        Those attributes are not mutually exclusive. If you can tell from the sight of a sign that you are at a certain place makes this sign a landmark.

        • Then by your definition we should NEVER EVER remove ANY signs, because to someone somewhere they are a landmark.
          • by Sique ( 173459 )
            No. You can actually remove landmarks. Then that part of the land is no longer marked by the sign.
            • Yeah, I think we are quibbling over the definition of landmark.
              Let's google that quick...

              an object or feature of a landscape or town that is easily seen and recognized from a distance, especially one that enables someone to establish their location.

              So you are quite correct in your interpretation, however, the second definition of it is

              an event or discovery marking an important stage or turning point in something.

              which is what the article is referring to, to which I say that I have never heard of Ampex be

        • by Desler ( 1608317 )

          And how is it a culturally significant landmark?

          • by Sique ( 173459 )
            Oh, that was not a given. I just wanted to point out that "being a sign" and "being a landmark" are not the distinguished properties the great-grandparent postulated.
    • is a vast overestimate of the sign's importance. It's nothing more than a bloody advertisement, and we need fewer ads in our life, not more.

      TFA even says its going into storage if someone wants ot, surely if it was a real item of cultural significance he could do a crowdfund to buy it and display it wherever, maybe donate it the lourve or something. He doesn't seem interested in the notion he might be able to buy it himself. But then again as you say, it's an advert so there are probably rules about that sort of thing.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      The Hollywood sign was put up to promote real estate in 'Hollywoodville.' Maybe it should come down, too.

      • There's a difference between original purpose, and attained cultural status. And you know it.

        The Hollywood sign has taken on far more significance through it's history than this sign - it's a true landmark, and an iconic image that practically everyone in the developed world recognizes instantly. The sign in question in TFA is the equivalent of keeping up one of those 80-foot-tall Denny's signs at a freeway offramp long after the Denny's has been torn down because Steve McQueen once had a scram slam there

    • I sure as hell didn't know what Ampex is, nor had I known anything about the sign, someone seems to have forgotten to tell the rest of the world about its cultural significance. A quick googling also showed that the sign looked worn and kinda crappy now so from an outsider's perspective, good riddance
      • Give it a few days and I will have forgotten who Ampex is again!

      • Hear ye! From this day forward, any monument or landmark unknown to Cultural Significance Minister Kalarius will have its status removed and any physical marker shall be decommissioned as soon as is logistically convenient. All current or future restoration projects are now cancelled to repair or renovate all monuments or landmarks that have been determined to look "worn and kinda crappy."
        • Hear ye! From this day forward, any monument or landmark unknown to Cultural Significance Minister Kalarius will have its status removed and any physical marker shall be decommissioned as soon as is logistically convenient. All current or future restoration projects are now cancelled to repair or renovate all monuments or landmarks that have been determined to look "worn and kinda crappy."

          We must never change anything lest we trample all over someone's nostalgia! In any case, your examples could be (or are being) renovated and refurbished so that future generations can enjoy them, this is a bloody sign for a business that isn't even at that location anymore, I think the vast majority of people that drive on 101 aren't going to miss it. If it's so culturally significant, why doesn't someone pay to fix it up and move it to a museum?

          Also, I kinda like the title, maybe I'll add it to my sig ;

    • I'm afraid it also demonstrates a lack of understanding as to what constitutes culture.
    • It's also a piece of history. It's the start of high tech in the Silicon Valley area. The modern nerds seem to have zero interest in history anymore. And there's barely any silicon companies left as most high tech companies in the area are really in advertising and social media.

      I worked across the street from the sign for 7 years in buildings that I presume used to be Ampex. So it's sad that it's all been torn down now.

  • Cutting edge (Score:5, Interesting)

    by hackertourist ( 2202674 ) on Friday August 17, 2018 @06:39AM (#57142582)

    About 25 years ago, I worked for a radio station as a sound engineer. They used open-reel tape decks as their main recording medium, and we had loads of Ampex 456 reels in use.
    Now most tape manufacturers sold their tape on plastic reels. Ampex however used reels with aluminium flanges. Because we were always in a hurry when doing live radio, we engineers had the habit of braking the reels by hand when rewinding them. When doing that on a plastic spool, the worst that could happen was overheated fingers from the friction. On the Ampex reels however you had to beware of the 3 large holes in the flange; if you caught one of those, the aluminium would cut right through your fingers.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    They'll get round to using it again one day. Just like all those VHS tapes in my cupboard!

  • As miniature mechanical devices advance so could the medium(s) and methods upon which information is written. Tape for audio and video recording purposes still produce the best analogue of what the sensing device sends. The truth is that microphone technology has not had major advancement because the diaphragm used to create devices like Neumann professional mics have been around for a great many years. The technology used in the production of mic diaphragms has not advanced.

    Optical sensing has advanced greatly but professional camera lens technology has not. If you really look at some of the great images taken by Ansel Adams you see the levels of resolution he used to create his photographic art, digital up until now has paled in comparison.

    In the same vein, some of the great recordings done in the in the late 1950 and early 1960 by DGG, Columbia Master Works and Phillips optical audio to film tape you see the same quality of detailed sound that is only starting to become possible now with digital recording.

    The combination of great analogue tech that is not stagnant with digital is the way forward. For instance advanced large size reflex ribbon mics with miniature electronics are just starting to happen and become affordable for the pro as are large size high density and sensitivity ccd based cameras that can take large lenses and produce close to what Ansel Adams did. Ansel was certainly not alone and owed a dept to some of the great photographers that showed the way some of whom were American. Here we can clearly see that fine grained analogue photography [europeana.eu] was starting to make leaps and bounds until the first world war really screwed up things for a while. France, England, Germany started to take the technology and keep it secretly in the military. The same bullshit happened during the second world war and during the cold war. Both advanced miniaturized audio recording technology and miniaturized high resolution camera technology has if anything been held back by war.

    The great analogue technologies which ampex helped introduce to the public, essentially during times of peace, are very important and the sign is a reminder of this fact. It should stay or at least not fade into the dust of what we perceive as progress! If the young of today and our antecedents cannot learn from the past then American society is doomed.

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward

      It's actually YOU that missed the point - Ampex didn't have a clue about tape recorder technology until it was able to examine tape machines brought back from Germany. The Nazis used wire recorders in the field, but it was (I think) Telefunken that designed and built large orchestra quality tape machines that the Nazis played back 24/7 over the air. An article back in the 70's examined this, and mentioned the the Allies couldn't believe that Hitler would keep orchestras playing on the air all night long.

      • the Allies couldn't believe that Hitler would keep orchestras playing on the air all night long

        Don't need a tape recorder for that. Didn't it occur to the Allies that Hitler could have been playing records?

    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      The reason these things haven't advanced much is because they don't need to. Microphones have been able to capture sounds in a wider spectrum than our ears can hear, with better dynamics response too for a long time now. There is no point in recording any better because you cant hear the difference. Same for speakers, headphones, the recording media itself. A CD could already play back sounds outside of the human range of hearing back in the 80's. You don't need a better microphone.

      The same applies for lens

  • While we're at it, can we take the blog that styles itself as a relevant media outlet called "Fast Company"? (I was surprised that thing survived the dotcom implosion - haven't heard anything from it in 15 years.)
  • The future should not be held hostage by the past. Otherwise we become Italy.
    • The future should not be held hostage by the past.

      Quite. That damned Ampex sign has held me hostage for long enough.

  • Not to seem snide but since I don't live there and have never even heard of the company, please explain to me why I (or anyone else) should care about some random bit of signage for a company just because it's been there a long time. I looked up some pictures and whatever significance this thing has to locals is utterly lost on me. It looks like a typical boring and wasteful company sign. Is this another example of people on the coasts thinking what happens in their city is somehow special and important

    • by Anonymous Coward

      I was born in Redwood City, lived half my life in the Bay Area and have worked in tech since 1999. I’d never heard if this sign and couldn’t care less that it is going away. If it is iconic, a museum or collector would have snapped it up.

      As for preservation being a “coastal” thing, that is nonsense. I live in flyover country now and people here are if anything more obsessed with propping up obsolete historical or otherwise noteable knickknacks.

      • I live in flyover country now and people here are if anything more obsessed with propping up obsolete historical or otherwise noteable knickknacks.

        Perhaps but they don't waste the time of a bunch of people posting stories about local news on a globally read website. While I'm sure slashdot has a fair number of bay area readers, I'm comfortable stating that almost everyone here has never heard of the sign or probably the company. I cannot imagine why the slashdot editors thought this would be of general interest to slashdot readers...

  • I recall many years ago (I think early 70s) listening to a radio program that announced that the richest actor in Hollywood turned out to be Fred MacMurray. The reason was that he was an early investor in Ampex.

    However looking now (wikipedia, etc) I see no mention of this. Can anyone here say if that is true or if I just mis-remembered it somehow?

  • "I resisted the temptation to chain myself to the baseâ"I wish Iâ(TM)d thought to bring the necessary equipmentâ"but did pay my respects and take some photos."

    ROFL at the lunacy.

  • A university in Toronto tore down the historic Sam The Record Man building, and promised to reinstall its beloved sign elsewhere. It took them 8 years, but they finally installed it over a major public square.

  • Up here in LA, where the 101 runs through City of Industry, Tascam had an office and repair center with an enormous sign you could see from the fwy. Several years ago it was changed to advertise a cleaning supply company (while keeping the same shape). Obv reflecting the new tenants of the bldg. Closer to my house is a run-down sign next to a strip mall for a bank that hasn't been there for 20+ yrs. I hope it stays up forever.

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