[opendtv] Re: Eugene Polley, Conjuror of a Device That Changed TV Habits, Dies at 96

  • From: Cliff Benham <flyback1@xxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: opendtv@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Sat, 26 May 2012 13:45:06 -0400

I find it both ironic and comical that in this piece there is an explanation of how the early TV tuning dial works. Amazing.


What would people today do if they encountered a Standard Desk-80 dial telephone?
Go online to find operating instructions for it?
Cliff

On 5/25/2012 9:05 PM, Craig Birkmaier wrote:
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/05/23/business/eugene-t-polley-inventor-of-the-wireless-tv-remote-dies-at-96.html?_r=1&ref=technology


Eugene Polley, Conjuror of a Device That Changed TV Habits, Dies at 96
By MARGALIT FOX
Published: May 22, 2012

Eugene Polley, an inventor whose best-known creation has fostered
blissful sloth, caused decades of domestic discord and forever altered
the way consumers watch television, died on Sunday in Downers Grove,
Ill. Mr. Polley, the inventor of the wireless television remote control,
was 96.

His death was announced by the Zenith Electronics Corporation, where Mr.
Polley began his career in the stockroom before rising through the
engineering ranks to invent the device, called the Flash-Matic, in 1955.

"Just think!," an advertisement breathlessly proclaimed that year.
"Without budging from your easy chair you can turn your new Zenith
Flash-Matic set on, off, or change channels. You can even shut off
annoying commercials while the picture remains on the screen."

The Flash-Matic remote, which worked like a flashlight, was shaped like
a snub-nosed revolver. The shape was a considered choice on Mr. Polley's
part, as he explained in 2000, letting viewers in the age of ubiquitous
TV westerns "shoot out" commercials.

Flash-Matic made the TV audience less captive, though also less active.
For the first time, viewers could comfortably exercise dominion over
sound and image without simultaneously exercising the body on the march
between couch and dial.

(The "dial" was a round thing with numbers on it - all the way up to 13
- by which viewers changed the channel through the direct application of
fingers and wrist. One did not so much surf channels in those days as
ride their gentle swells with all due deliberateness.)

As Mr. Polley, by then 86, proudly told an interviewer in 2002: "The
flush toilet may have been the most civilized invention ever devised,
but the remote control is the next most important. It's almost as
important as sex."

For his invention, Mr. Polley received a thousand-dollar bonus. But his
device was soon supplanted by a more efficient, more enduring and far
better-selling one, developed by a Zenith colleague, Robert Adler.

News accounts over the years have often described Mr. Adler erroneously
as the TV remote's sole inventor. Mr. Polley, a plain-spoken man who
seemed to avail himself of his own internal mute button only rarely, was
largely relegated to the margins of history, a condition that rankled.

"Not only did I not get credit for doing anything," he told The Chicago
Tribune in 2006, "I got a kick in the rear end."

Eugene Theodore Polley was born in Chicago on Nov. 29, 1915. (He
disliked the name Theodore and adopted his confirmation name, Joseph, as
his middle name.) His father, a bootlegger, abandoned the family when
Gene was about 10.

The young Mr. Polley studied at the City Colleges of Chicago and the
Armour Institute of Technology (now the Illinois Institute of
Technology), but lacked the money to complete a degree. At 20 he joined
the Zenith Radio Company, as it was then known, as a stock boy earning
40 cents an hour.

Mechanically adept, he worked his way into the engineering department.
During World War II Mr. Polley, on loan from Zenith, worked for the
United States military on bomb fuses and ship-detecting radar.

After the war, as TV sets began to colonize American homes, Zenith's
president, Eugene F. McDonald, faced a quandary. Mr. McDonald, who held
a utopian view of the new medium, was certain that viewers would revolt
en masse against television commercials, by his lights a growing scourge.

But until that halcyon day arrived, Mr. McDonald knew, he needed to
offer consumers a stopgap, and he enlisted the company's engineers to
make it.
The first TV remote, called Lazy Bones, was introduced by Zenith in
1950. It had one profound drawback, however: a cable snaking from the
remote to the set, over which users were inclined to trip.

Mr. McDonald enlisted Mr. Polley to build a wireless remote, and the
Flash-Matic was born. The hand-held device emitted a visible beam of
light, which consumers could point at a compatible TV set.

The new, purpose-built sets had a photo cell embedded in each corner of
the screen; the viewer activated the cell by "shooting" it with the
remote. One cell changed the channel up, another changed the channel
down, a third muted the sound, and the fourth turned the set on and off.
The device proved popular: during its first and only year of existence,
30,000 Flash-Matic sets were sold.

But there were difficulties. Because the system was light-activated,
sunlight hitting the TV screen could cause the channels to change in
spontaneous roulette. Viewers also had trouble remembering which corner
of the screen controlled which function.

Mr. Adler improved Mr. Polley's device by making it responsive to sound
instead of light. His remote, called Space Command, used inaudible,
high-frequency sound waves to control the set. It, too, had problems -
it could be set off by the sound of jangling keys or rattling coins -
but was deemed enough of an improvement on its predecessor to be brought
to market in 1956.

 From that year to the early 1980s, when infrared remotes became
standard, more than nine million sets controlled by Space Command
technology were sold.

Mr. Polley, a longtime resident of Lombard, Ill., had lived most
recently in Glen Ellyn, Ill. He is survived by a son, Eugene Jr., and a
grandson. His wife, the former Blanche Wiley, died before him, as did a
daughter, Joan Polley.

With other colleagues, Mr. Adler and Mr. Polley represented Zenith when
it was given a special Emmy Award in 1997 for its development of
wireless remotes.

Mr. Adler died in 2007. Zenith has said publicly that it considers him
and Mr. Polley the joint inventors of the device.

Mr. Polley begged to differ.

"A father has to be present at conception," he said in a 2002 interview.
"And if you're not, you're not that father."



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