00:00In the 1950s, a young engineer named Amar Bose bought a brand new stereo system.
00:06But when he played it, the sound was flat, lifeless, and nothing like a live concert.
00:11That disappointment sparked a lifelong obsession, to make sound feel real.
00:15Amar Bose, a professor at MIT, began researching acoustics in his small lab.
00:20He wasn't chasing money or fame, he wanted perfection in sound.
00:23In 1964, he founded Bose Corporation with a simple but daring vision,
00:27to build products that people didn't know they needed yet.
00:30While the world raced for louder speakers, Bose focused on how humans heard sound.
00:35He built systems that reflected audio off walls to recreate the feeling of a concert hall.
00:39People thought it was crazy, until they listened.
00:42Bose refused to make products for short-term profit.
00:45He turned down investors and stayed private to protect innovation over money.
00:49He once said, I never went into business to make money.
00:52I went into business to make a difference.
00:55His persistence paid off.
00:56From noise-canceling headphones used by NASA to the quiet cabins of luxury cars,
01:01Bose changed how the world experiences sound.
01:03And it all started with one bad stereo.
01:06Even after his death, his company remains employee-owned, driven by research, not greed.
01:11A true reflection of his belief that innovation, not marketing, builds legends.
01:16From a disappointed listener to a sound revolutionist,
01:18Amar Bose tuned the world to excellence.
01:21Like.
01:22Share.
01:23Follow for more such game-changer stories.
01:26See you then.
01:44Bye-bye.
Comments