From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Kazuo Hashimoto

Kazuo Hashimoto (橋本 和芙, Hashimoto Kazuo; died August 1995) was a Japanese inventor who registered over 1,000 patents throughout the world, including patents for a Caller-ID system and telephone answering machines. He filed for his first telephone answering machine patent, what would become the Ansa Fone, in Japan in 1958, followed by the United States in 1963, granted in the United States in 1968. Bell's monopoly over telephony in the United States combined with the recent Hush-A-Phone and Carterfone decisions required that all telephone answering machines be connected through strictly mechanical means. This is evidenced through the mechanical arms used to pick up the telephone handset and the lack of any electrical connections with the telephone device itself. He patented Caller-ID in Japan in 1976, and received a United States patent in 1980. In 1983 he invented a digital telephone answering device.

Rendering article…

Content sourced from manual.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI, and may be sourced from third parties. CloudSurf Software LLC makes no warranties as to its accuracy, completeness, or reliability, and accepts no liability for it. Always verify important information against primary sources.

Report