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RIP Robert Adler
#1
[quote Associated Press]

Boise, Idaho --- Hit the mute button for a moment of silence: The co-inventor of the TV remote, Robert Adler, has died.

Mr. Adler, who won an Emmy Award along with fellow engineer Eugene Polley for the device that made the couch potato possible, died Thursday of heart failure at a Boise nursing home at 93, Zenith Electronics Corp. said Friday.

In his six-decade career with Zenith, Mr. Adler was a prolific inventor, earning more than 180 U.S. patents. He was best known for his 1956 Zenith Space Command remote control, which helped make TV a truly sedentary pastime.

In a May 2004 interview with The Associated Press, Mr. Adler recalled being among two dozen engineers at Zenith given the mission to find a new way for television viewers to change channels without getting out of their chairs or tripping over a cable.

But he downplayed his role when asked if he felt his invention helped raise a new generation of couch potatoes.

"People ask me all the time --- 'Don't you feel guilty for it?' And I say that's ridiculous," he said. "It seems reasonable and rational to control the TV from where you normally sit and watch television."

Various sources have credited either Mr. Polley, another Zenith engineer, or Mr. Adler as the inventor of the device. Mr. Polley created the "Flashmatic," a wireless remote introduced in 1955 that operated on photo cells. Mr. Adler introduced ultrasonics, or high-frequency sound, to make the device more efficient in 1956.

Zenith credits them as co-inventors, and the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences awarded both Mr. Adler and Mr. Polley an Emmy in 1997 for the landmark invention. Mr. Adler joined Zenith's research division in 1941 after earning a doctorate in physics from the University of Vienna. He retired as research vice president in 1979, and served as a technical consultant until 1999, when Zenith merged with LG Electronics Inc.

During World War II, Mr. Adler specialized in military communications equipment. He later helped develop sensitive amplifiers for ultrahigh frequency signals used by radio astronomers and the U.S. Air Force for long-range missile detection.
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#2
Wow--Great find and read-It was a different time--he will be missed.
When I was young, we had TV that used one of the ultrasonic remotes. Occasionally the family dog would shake hard (like when they shake water off), and his rabies/license tags would clang just right and inadvertently change the channel.
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#3
When I was very young a family friend had a remote controlled Curtis Mathis. You'd press a button on the brick and watch the tuner knob slowly go clunk, clunk, clunk ... around to reach the channel. What's amazing to me is that anyone would bother with a remote when you've only got like 4 channels to choose from ... Wink
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#4
180 patents. This was a true innovator.
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#5
Yup - I remember using this on our old Zenith TV - mid 70's...

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