SIAHAL_181024_076
Existing comment:
Sales of Thomas Edison's tinfoil phonograph were poor -- its recordings were fragile and short-lived -- and he abandoned it. Nearly a decade later, spurred by competition from Alexander Graham Bell, Edison made multiple improvements and introduced new machines that found popular appeal. The Edison Home Phonograph, first manufactured in 1896, played individually prerecorded wax cylinders.
Proposed user comment: