Author:
STEPHENS CARLENE,DENNIS MAGGIE
Abstract
In the late 1960s teams of engineers working independently in Japan, Switzerland and
the United States used newly created electronic components to completely reinvent the
wristwatch. The products these groups developed instigated a global revolution in the watch
industry and gave everyone, whether they needed it or not, access to the split-second accuracy
once available only to scientists and technicians. This radical change in timekeeping technology
was in the vanguard of a dramatic shift from a mechanical to an electronic world and raises
important issues about technological change for scholars interested in late twentieth-century
history. Examining the work of three teams of engineers, this paper offers a comparative approach
to understanding how local differences in culture, economy, business structure and access to
technological knowledge shaped the design of finished products and their acceptance by users.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
History and Philosophy of Science,History
Cited by
11 articles.
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