Docking station

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OBJECT TYPE
headset/charging
DATE
1995
ARTIFACT NUMBER
2017.0018.002
MANUFACTURER
Northern Telecom Ltd.
MODEL
SoundBeam
LOCATION
Canada

More Information


General Information

Serial #
N 0970
Part Number
2
Total Parts
6
AKA
N/A
Patents
N/A
General Description
Synthetic charging dock with metal screws and contacts.

Dimensions

Note: These reflect the general size for storage and are not necessarily representative of the object's true dimensions.

Length
32.7 cm
Width
24.3 cm
Height
6.0 cm
Thickness
N/A
Weight
N/A
Diameter
N/A
Volume
N/A

Lexicon

Group
Communications
Category
Telephony
Sub-Category
N/A

Manufacturer

AKA
Northern Telecom
Country
Canada
State/Province
Unknown
City
Unknown

Context

Country
Canada
State/Province
Ontario
Period
ca. late 1990s
Canada
The “hands free neckset”, which became the SoundBeam, was first proposed by Bell Northern Research industrial designer Jim Bee in 1983. The proposal called for a hands-free telephone accessory for the new open office and changing workstyle allowed for by the introduction of the desktop computer and the elimination of personal secretaries and receptionists. While trying to be ahead of the curve in the “new” office space technologically, by virtue of its design, the “necktie” still encoded a division of labour based on sex. Neither was it a speakerphone, which could be heard by and interacted with by everyone in the room, nor was it a headset which were associated with secretary/receptionist positions. The “neckset” as positioned as a new technology between acting as a speakerphone and a traditional headset. Despite being pitched to the leadership at Bell Northern and Northern Telecom and undergoing a cost breakdown analysis, the “necktie” never moved beyond the concept stage in 1983. By the early 1990s, the office space was changing again. Gone were individual office spaces, now reserved solely for managers and executives, with the cubicle, open concept offices becoming the norm. This new office layout created an opportunity to resurrect the “necktie” idea. Taking the idea one-step further, the Industrial Design group at Nothern Telecom worked with the researchers in the Acoustic Design group to develop a microphone and speaker system that would act like a “cone of silence” around the user. The goal was to engineer the product to be useful in an open environment where employees could not just shut an office door to cut out extraneous sounds. The SoundBeam was developed as far as a pre-production model used in market testing. 1000 of the devices were made and tested in offices across Canada. While there was positive response to the SoundBeam (in some cases leading testers to keep their model), Nortel was unable to successfully market the product. Gone were individual office spaces, now reserved solely for managers and executives, with the cubicle, open concept offices becoming the norm. This new office layout created an opportunity to resurrect the “necktie” idea. Taking the idea one-step further, the Industrial Design group at Nothern Telecom worked with the researchers in the Acoustic Design group to develop a microphone and speaker system that would act like a “cone of silence” around the user. The goal was to engineer the product to be useful in an open environment where employees could not just shut an office door to cut out extraneous sounds. The SoundBeam was developed as far as a pre-production model used in market testing. 1000 of the devices were made and tested in offices across Canada. While there was positive response to the SoundBeam (in some cases leading testers to keep their model), Nortel was unable to successfully market the product.
Function
A base on whichh a wireless headset can be charged and that acts as a receiver and transmitter to connect the headset to a telephone.
Technical
The SoundBeam was developed create an area of sound around the wearer which was not interfered with from people outside the telephone conversation. The location and the design of the speakers and microphone was developed through experimentation and consultation with the Bell Northern Research Acoustic Design group. The microphone and lover system are placed such that the wearer’s speech is captured at 100%, noises to the left and the right of the wearer are significantly reduced, and noises directly in front of or behind the wearer are in a null space for the microphone meaning that their interference is reduced to almost zero. The same effect occurs with the shoulder speakers wherein the wearer can hear clearly, people to the sides see a significant reduction (up to 18 db), and people to the front and the back are in a null zone. The acoustic properties of the SoundBeam were first developed for use in the Orbitor cellular telephone prototype and refined for use in the SoundBeam.
Area Notes
Unknown

Details

Markings
Label on proper bottom reads: "N 0970"
Missing
Appears complete
Finish
Grey exterior with a black antenna, and silver-coloured and gold-coloured metal screws and parts.
Decoration
N/A

CITE THIS OBJECT

If you choose to share our information about this collection object, please cite:

Northern Telecom Ltd., Docking station, circa 1995, Artifact no. 2017.0018, Ingenium – Canada’s Museums of Science and Innovation, http://collections.ingeniumcanada.org/en/id/2017.0018.002/

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