
The Ultimate Tinkerer: William Lear (eBook, ePUB)
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William Powell Lear (1902-1978) never finished high school, yet he became one of the most prolific and disruptive inventors of the twentieth century. His life was a dizzying, high-stakes chronicle of serial entrepreneurship, defined by a furious intellect and an almost manic compulsion to build the future faster than anyone else.How could one man be responsible for such a disparate list of innovations? Lear's genius was his willingness to stake everything on an idea. He simultaneously invented the first successful, mass-market car radio; earned the prestigious Collier Trophy for his groundbrea...
William Powell Lear (1902-1978) never finished high school, yet he became one of the most prolific and disruptive inventors of the twentieth century. His life was a dizzying, high-stakes chronicle of serial entrepreneurship, defined by a furious intellect and an almost manic compulsion to build the future faster than anyone else.
How could one man be responsible for such a disparate list of innovations? Lear's genius was his willingness to stake everything on an idea. He simultaneously invented the first successful, mass-market car radio; earned the prestigious Collier Trophy for his groundbreaking automatic autopilot systems used in World War II; and, in his sixties, pioneered the icon of corporate speed: the Learjet. Even then, he wasn't finished, pivoting to perfect the 8-track tape system that defined an era of mobile music.
This biography dives into the chaotic heart of Lear's career: the near-ruinous financial gamble he took to build the jet, the volatile corporate culture he commanded, and the profound, lasting impact of his work on modern air travel and consumer culture. Approx.160 pages, 29100 word count
How could one man be responsible for such a disparate list of innovations? Lear's genius was his willingness to stake everything on an idea. He simultaneously invented the first successful, mass-market car radio; earned the prestigious Collier Trophy for his groundbreaking automatic autopilot systems used in World War II; and, in his sixties, pioneered the icon of corporate speed: the Learjet. Even then, he wasn't finished, pivoting to perfect the 8-track tape system that defined an era of mobile music.
This biography dives into the chaotic heart of Lear's career: the near-ruinous financial gamble he took to build the jet, the volatile corporate culture he commanded, and the profound, lasting impact of his work on modern air travel and consumer culture. Approx.160 pages, 29100 word count
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