Sweigert's heroes included
Samuel Morse,
Thomas Edison,
Alexander Graham Bell,
Lee DeForest,
Edwin Armstrong,
Albert Einstein, and
Philo Taylor Farnsworth. Sweigert was coincidentally born in the same city that hosts the
National Inventors Hall of Fame, Akron, Ohio. Sweigert studied the life stories of these inventors, and he frequently would recount the early technical and legal struggles of these inventors to get their inventions patented and protected. Edison's early technical struggles with
full duplex (two way) communication was another favorite subject, born out of Edison's desire to "speed up" telegraphic conversations by sending and receiving at the same time. Whether Edison could actually perform this telegraphic feat has never documented, but Sweigert credited this story with his inspiration for a full duplex cordless telephone. Sweigert studied how duplexes reduced frustrations dealing with technologies, going back to the early days of telegraphy. Sweigert admired
Alexander Graham Bell's work with the deaf as an inspiration for development of the telephone. One of Sweigert's sons is hearing impaired. This may explain Sweigert's intricate use of
amplifiers in the initial invention. Sweigert was physically disabled, and saw the cordless phone as a similar to the telephone in terms of motivation and inspiration for the development of the invention. Sweigert sided with
Alexander Graham Bell in the
Elisha Gray and Alexander Bell telephone controversy, although
Elisha Gray was another Cleveland inventor. He did credit Gray with being the first to come up with a way of
multiplexing several messages simultaneously on the same wire. He also enjoyed the fact that Bell was a complete amateur compared with professional established laboratories of Elisha Gray and super-inventor Thomas Edison. He greatly admired Edison's work on improving the vibrating
diaphragm to vary the induced resistance from varying frequency in the voice. He frequently cited Bell besting Edison on the invention of the telephone as Edison's motivation to invent the phonograph. He expressed dismay how Bell missed inventing the phonograph after his frequent lectures about visualizing audio waves and electrically reproducing them. Sweigert credited being able to visualize human voice waveforms as another key in perfecting the cordless phone. Sweigert also admired
Edwin Armstrong and his invention of
FM radio. Armstrong's concept of the
superheterodyne receiver to filter out noise and amplify the original signal is used in the cordless phone. He also admired Armstrong's courage to challenge the status quo of
AM radio and its powerful leader,
David Sarnoff. ==Wireless networking==