Talk:Nipper

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An "American Pit Bull Terrier" is an, presumably, American name for a very ancient British breed, so the distinction attempted to be drawn in the article ("unlikely...") is actually uninformative.

[edit] Not "meaningless"

"Technically, this modification rendered the painting meaningless, since gramophones were not capable of recording, but the public seemed not to have noticed this error,"

It certainly doesn't render the painting meaningless, it just changes the context. I always assumed the "master" in His Master's Voice was meant to be a successful recording artist, rather than just an average Joe making his own recordings at home.

If, say, Enrico Caruso was Nipper's master, and Nipper was sitting in front of a disc gramophone playing one of Caruso's recordings, then the dog would (obviously) be listening to his master's voice. 217.155.20.163 01:00, 30 October 2006 (UTC)

[edit] Modification of painting

The story as I have read in many histories of the phonograph that have been published usually give this story,

"It had been several years after the painting had been completed that Barraud wished to update the painting in order to sell it. So, he went to the sales offices of the Gramaphone company and asked to borrow a horn for the purpose. Afterwards, he showed the "updated" painting to an interested company offical who told Barraud if he would paint out the rest of the Edison-Bell machine with one of the Berliner style-ones he would buy the painting. Barraud did, and went on to make three copies of the changed painting for the Gramaphone comapany. The ghost of the original Edison-bell machine can still be seen in the first painting."

[edit] Would not have been an Ediphone model

The original phonograph was an Edison-Bell (probably a "Standard" model)machine. All home-entertainment cylinder phonographs were capable of making recordings, not just "dictating" models, such as the Ediphone.