Kane Kramer

Summary

Kane Kramer is a British inventor and businessman. He is credited with the initial invention of the digital audio player, in 1979.[1]

Kane Kramer
Born (1956-03-11) 11 March 1956 (age 68)
Hackney, London
CitizenshipBritish
Known forInventor
Websitewww.kanekramer.com

Invention of the DAP edit

In 1981 Kramer filed for a UK patent for his newly conceived digital audio player, the IXI. UK patent 2115996 was issued in 1985, and U.S. patent 4,667,088 was issued in 1987. The player was the size of a credit card with a small LCD screen and navigation and volume buttons and would have held data of at least 8 MB of solid-state bubble memory chip with a capacity of 3½ minutes' worth of audio. Plans were made for a 10-minute stereo memory card and the system was at one time fitted with a hard drive enabling over an hour of recorded digital music. His first investor was Sir Paul McCartney. Later, Kramer set up a company to promote IXI and five working prototypes were produced with 16-bit sampling at 44.1 kilohertz with the pre-production prototype being unveiled at the APRS Audio/Visual trade exhibition in October 1986. In a 2004 interview with The Guardian, Kramer stated that the company at the time had "orders worth £60 million" (value at current day) for the device from the recording industry.[2] However, in 1988 a boardroom dispute within Kramer's company and the subsequent failure to raise the £60,000 required to renew the patent resulted in the patent lapsing and entering the public domain, though Kramer is still the owner of the designs.[citation needed]

iPod testimony edit

In 2008, Kramer was called as a witness by Apple Inc. to defend itself from charges of patent infringement for its iPod digital audio player.[3][4]

Current work edit

Kramer is still professionally involved in the technology sector. He is the Chairman of the British Inventor's Society and Organizer of the British Invention Show & World Invention Awards. He acts as a technology advisor to International Clean Energy Circle (ICI) and a number of multinational companies. Kramer gives talks on innovation around the World, notably to the Directors at Argonne National Laboratory architects of the Manhattan Project, and Kramer followed Al Gore on the subject of climate change at the Royal Courts of Justice. Kramer is director and executive producer of the film Disparity which completed filming in late 2018 followed with the production of a new TV series and film Humankind. Disparity: The Search for Real-Aid, a 100-minute documentary film and aid face-off, was Kramer's third production. The film was released in 23 October 2019. Other productions are 10CC Live in Concert at Wembley in 1982, his first, and The Sweet Live in Concert at the Marquee Club in London 1986, his second.

References edit

  1. ^ Portable data processing and storage system, United States Patent 4667088
  2. ^ Rix, Juliet (29 September 2004). "Talk time: Kane Kramer". The Guardian. Retrieved 21 October 2012.
  3. ^ Arno Frank, einestages: Tech-Pionier Kane Kramer: Der wahre iGod, (Der Spiegel online, 19 October 2012) (in German)
  4. ^ Apple Computer Inc. v. Burst.com, Inc., (California, Northern District Court, January 4, 2007). See pages 9-12.

External links edit

  • Official site of Kane Kramer
  • Original investor's report on the IXI from 1979 (PDF Format)