Toshitada Doi

Japanese engineer

DBpedia resource is: http://dbpedia.org/resource/Toshitada_Doi

Abstract is: Toshitada Doi (土井 利忠, Doi Toshitada, born February 2, 1943) is a Japanese electrical engineer, who played a significant role in the digital audio revolution. He received a degree in electrical engineering from the Tokyo Institute of Technology in 1964, and a PhD from Tohoku University in 1972. He joined Sony Japan in 1964 and started the first digital audio project within Sony. He was the driving force behind the PCM adaptor, and was a prominent member of the Sony/Philips taskforce responsible for the design of the Compact Disc. He created, among others, the CIRC error correction system. He, with Kees Immink, refutes the myth that the Compact Disc's playing time was determined by Beethoven's Ninth Symphony. He was the lead engineer of the DASH multi-track digital audio tape recorder. In the 1990s, he headed Sony's Digital Creatures Laboratory, where he was responsible for the Aibo, Sony's robotic dog. In 2003, Doi created the Qrio, a running humanoid robot.

Born 1942-02-02 in Hyōgo Prefecture (Q130290)

Toshitada Doi is …
instance of (P31):
humanQ5

External links are
P268Bibliothèque nationale de France ID165733465
P646Freebase ID/m/07kccc3
P213ISNI0000000082957527
P244Library of Congress authority IDn88162823
P5034National Library of Korea IDKAC199632283
P214VIAF ID109593887
P10832WorldCat Entities IDE39PBJhMj6FFvPVh6FygvHXmVC

P27country of citizenshipJapanQ17
P69educated atTokyo Institute of TechnologyQ587326
Tohoku UniversityQ1062129
P734family nameDoiQ5288585
DoiQ5288585
DoiQ5288585
P735given nameToshitadaQ19840936
ToshitadaQ19840936
P1814name in kanaどい としただ
P106occupationbusinesspersonQ43845
engineerQ81096
P21sex or gendermaleQ6581097