Question:
who invented the t.v?
Mike
2009-06-18 10:46:35 UTC
and when
Six answers:
anonymous
2009-06-18 10:55:59 UTC
A man Did i guess.

The answer above is the full Wikipedia content so no more answers now.
Hopalong Cassidy
2009-06-18 14:28:21 UTC
Lamar Turddor, 1656. TV Guide was one page. Most of the ads on TV were for Plague cures. Billy Mays had an infomercial for "The Pocket Dragon Slayer." Some of the network shows were: Two and a Half Robin Hoods, Beverly Hills 9, Deal or Dungeon, King Charles in Charge and Gary Married. The government complained about the lack of violence on TV. TV Dinners had a double portion of gruel. There were three networks, and, yes, FOX was one of them. PBS aired for one hour per night and it was still Yanni in Rome. Law and Order was only on 17 times a day. The hot show was CSI: Sherwood Forest. The remote didn't work since triple A batteries were not invented for another 300 years. Oprah was thin, Ellen was straight and Jerry Springer was a TV Evangelist. I long for the good ole days.
Gary B
2009-06-18 11:14:48 UTC
In addition to Tyw69's information, don't forget Philo T. Farnsworth and Vladimir Zworykin.



BEFORE Baird invented the idea of transmitting picture electronically, Farnsworth and Zworykin worked on the idea of a "picture tube" (then called an Iconoscope). Without the work of these two, Baird would have had nothing to work with!



There is STILL a LOT of argument about Farnsworth and Zworykin -- who actually did what first. Their stories make some interesting reading.



It is said that Zworykin "worked on" the iconoscope in 1923, but never perfected it. Zworykin had a LOT of work to do, and some people say that he finished up his work only AFTER visiting Farnsworth's laboratory -- in 1930! Still, he filed a patent in 1923 that was not approved for 15 YEARS!



It is said that Farnsworth actually perfected the Iconoscope and the idea of "electrrical transmission of images" (thus laying the ground work for Baird), in September of 1927, but didn't file his patent until 1930 -- Two Years after Baird filed his in 1928 :-(



But then RCA bought Aworykin's patent, finished it off, and re-applied in 1938. Since Zworykin had first applied in 1923, RCA got the patent pre-dated to 1923, thus it APPEARS the Zworkykin's "invented" television in 1923.



There is a LOT of argument and specualtion, making an interesting "Consipiracy Theory" storyline.



Use Google to look up Philo T. Farnsworth and Vladimir Zworykin.
?
2009-06-20 16:41:03 UTC
Philo Farnsworth invented the television tube when he was only 14. RCA and David Sarnoff sued him for the patent, lost, then won it back taking the credit.
Ryan
2009-06-18 12:17:41 UTC
Scottish inventor, John Logie Baird, the father of this pervasive technology, first publicly demonstrated television on 26 January 1926, in his small laboratory in the Soho district of London. Although large companies with great financial support were also working on the problem of television, Baird managed to surpass them all with very little money, a handful of unpaid helpers and equipment pieced together using rather unconventional materials. For example, Baird's choice of mechanical scanning as the most effective way of achieving true television required the use of spinning discs -- which of financial necessity were made of hatboxes and mounted on a coffin lid.



The earliest suggestion of Baird's interest in television technology is an experiment which he conducted at his parents' house in 1903. This experiment involved the attempted construction of a selenium photo-electric cell, but was unsuccessful, and Baird burnt his hands in the process. Although John Logie Baird suggests that he first started work on a complete television system in Hastings, there is evidence that he actually began ten years earlier. In 1976, Peter Waddell wrote an article which quoted sources suggesting that Baird first experimented with a complete television system between 1912 and 1915, while living in Yoker and working towards his electrical engineering diploma at the Glasgow College. R.W. Burns reinforces this suggestion in his 1986 book British Television: The Formative Years. In 1996, Malcolm Baird said that his father's work in Yoker can now be considered a definite possibility.



The most fully substantiated evidence for Baird's early television work is found on the south coast of England, in Hastings in 1923. Even here, there is a certain amount of controversy, for Baird himself writes that he travelled directly from London to Hastings, where he then started work on television. This statement is untrue, for although Baird did travel to the south coast, it was not first to Hastings but to another seaside town called Folkestone. Since this new information has been released, a plaque has been placed on 26 Guildhall Street in Folkestone, in order to commemorate Baird's early television work there. According to R.W. Burns, Baird was definitely in Hastings during the winter of 1922 to 1923. This situation therefore suggests that Baird was simultaneously renting accommodation in Folkestone and Hastings.



In order to tackle the problem of television, John Logie Baird chose a system which employed mechanical scanning. There were various methods available to achieve this, and Baird selected a system which used the Nipkow disc as being the most promising. Invented by Paul Nipkow in 1884, this disc had a series of apertures cut into it, which could then be used to scan an image. This disc was combined with other discs, and produced a very different television set from the ones we use today, for Baird's system did not use the cathode ray tube which is the most common method of displaying an image on modern television equipment.



Baird was quite capable of inventing his machines, but he was not quite so capable of their construction. For this reason, he enlisted the help of two young Hastings boys, Victor Mills and Norman Loxdale. Mills assisted Baird in the refinement of his electronics and Loxdale made various components, including a Nipkow disc with two spirals of apertures which were covered with orange-red and blue-green filters. Loxdale later described his surprise at Baird's experimentation with this disc, as at that time the inventor had not yet achieved a television picture. This surprise can be more easily understood when one realises that this disc was capable of producing colour and/or three dimensional pictures.



There were two main problems which Baird would have to overcome in order to achieve television: the problem of the insensitivity of the photo-electric cell, and also the difficulty of obtaining a clear image. At first, he could only produce pictures of the outline of shapes, known as "shadowgraphs." C.F. Jenkins in America and D. von Mihaly in Hungary were also working on the problem of television, and had also produced shadowgraphs. However, Baird was able to solve his main difficulties and go beyond these two inventors in achieving true television.



To overcome his first problem, Baird worked with an assistant in Tunbridge Wells on the development of a photo-electric cell. The experimentation was successful, and he eventually produced a cell that "...was entirely different from existing cells on the market. The second problem was solved by Baird's refinement of his electronics. Douglas Brown suggests that Baird's system was as poor as everyone else's, but it was his use of a technique called "sharpening" that finally produced a television picture. Sharpening is an electronic method which brings a picture into focus in the same manner in which a normal lens focuses an image.
anonymous
2009-06-18 10:53:05 UTC
Scottish inventor, John Logie Baird, the father of this pervasive technology, first publicly demonstrated television on 26 January 1926, in his small laboratory in the Soho district of London. Although large companies with great financial support were also working on the problem of television, Baird managed to surpass them all with very little money, a handful of unpaid helpers and equipment pieced together using rather unconventional materials. For example, Baird's choice of mechanical scanning as the most effective way of achieving true television required the use of spinning discs -- which of financial necessity were made of hatboxes and mounted on a coffin lid.



The earliest suggestion of Baird's interest in television technology is an experiment which he conducted at his parents' house in 1903. This experiment involved the attempted construction of a selenium photo-electric cell, but was unsuccessful, and Baird burnt his hands in the process. Although John Logie Baird suggests that he first started work on a complete television system in Hastings, there is evidence that he actually began ten years earlier. In 1976, Peter Waddell wrote an article which quoted sources suggesting that Baird first experimented with a complete television system between 1912 and 1915, while living in Yoker and working towards his electrical engineering diploma at the Glasgow College. R.W. Burns reinforces this suggestion in his 1986 book British Television: The Formative Years. In 1996, Malcolm Baird said that his father's work in Yoker can now be considered a definite possibility.



The most fully substantiated evidence for Baird's early television work is found on the south coast of England, in Hastings in 1923. Even here, there is a certain amount of controversy, for Baird himself writes that he travelled directly from London to Hastings, where he then started work on television. This statement is untrue, for although Baird did travel to the south coast, it was not first to Hastings but to another seaside town called Folkestone. Since this new information has been released, a plaque has been placed on 26 Guildhall Street in Folkestone, in order to commemorate Baird's early television work there. According to R.W. Burns, Baird was definitely in Hastings during the winter of 1922 to 1923. This situation therefore suggests that Baird was simultaneously renting accommodation in Folkestone and Hastings.



In order to tackle the problem of television, John Logie Baird chose a system which employed mechanical scanning. There were various methods available to achieve this, and Baird selected a system which used the Nipkow disc as being the most promising. Invented by Paul Nipkow in 1884, this disc had a series of apertures cut into it, which could then be used to scan an image. This disc was combined with other discs, and produced a very different television set from the ones we use today, for Baird's system did not use the cathode ray tube which is the most common method of displaying an image on modern television equipment.



Baird was quite capable of inventing his machines, but he was not quite so capable of their construction. For this reason, he enlisted the help of two young Hastings boys, Victor Mills and Norman Loxdale. Mills assisted Baird in the refinement of his electronics and Loxdale made various components, including a Nipkow disc with two spirals of apertures which were covered with orange-red and blue-green filters. Loxdale later described his surprise at Baird's experimentation with this disc, as at that time the inventor had not yet achieved a television picture. This surprise can be more easily understood when one realises that this disc was capable of producing colour and/or three dimensional pictures.



There were two main problems which Baird would have to overcome in order to achieve television: the problem of the insensitivity of the photo-electric cell, and also the difficulty of obtaining a clear image. At first, he could only produce pictures of the outline of shapes, known as "shadowgraphs." C.F. Jenkins in America and D. von Mihaly in Hungary were also working on the problem of television, and had also produced shadowgraphs. However, Baird was able to solve his main difficulties and go beyond these two inventors in achieving true television.



To overcome his first problem, Baird worked with an assistant in Tunbridge Wells on the development of a photo-electric cell. The experimentation was successful, and he eventually produced a cell that "...was entirely different from existing cells on the market. The second problem was solved by Baird's refinement of his electronics. Douglas Brown suggests that Baird's system was as poor as everyone else's, but it was his use of a technique called "sharpening" that finally produced a television picture. Sharpening is an electronic method which brings a picture into focus in the same manner in which a normal lens focuses an image.



Almost eleven y


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