Willy Müller (inventor)


Willy Müller (* 18 October 1903 in Burgberg in the Allgäu, Germany, 15 September 1992 in Zollikon, Switzerland) was an inventor. Edit LifeQualtext

Until 1922 he did an apprenticeship as an electrician at the Allgäuer cross-country in Sonthofen and then worked for various companies.

He invented an electric movement advertisement and settled down in Munich in 1925 to found his company there next year. In 1930, he invented an electric car lift.

In 1938 he invented an automatic answering machine called Telephonograph. However, he still had to wait four years for admission from the Reichspostzentralamt. Since his operation in the Second World War was destroyed, he founded a new company in Switzerland, where he developed an improved answering machine Ipsophon in 1946/47. In 1950 he began producing dictation devices and a new simplified answering machine Alibiphon. With his Munich company Willy Müller & amp; Co. KG, he marketed the Willy Müller system from 1960 onwards. From 1972/73 he used miniature cassettes for his miniaturized automatic answering machines in digital technology. Weblinks Edit sourcetext

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