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Television. Julius Plücker - 1859 Sir William Crooks.

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Presentation on theme: "Television. Julius Plücker - 1859 Sir William Crooks."— Presentation transcript:

1 Television

2 Julius Plücker - 1859

3 Sir William Crooks

4 Crooks tube

5 Beam pulled up by magnet

6

7 Karl Braun - 1897

8 Braun’s cathode ray tube

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10 G. R. Carey – 1875

11 Shelford Bidwell – 1881

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13 Maurice leBlanc

14 Paul Nipkow – 1884

15 Mechanical TV - 1884

16 Boris Rosing First to use a cathode ray tube as a receiver for a mechanically scanned image

17 Archibald Campbell-Swinton First to suggest using cathode ray tubes for both sending and receiving images

18 1911 – A. Sinding-Larsen suggested using radio instead of wires as a carrier of picture signals 1911 – A. Sinding-Larsen suggested using radio instead of wires as a carrier of picture signals We now have all the concepts for what we think of as “modern television” We now have all the concepts for what we think of as “modern television” And then World War I happened And then World War I happened

19 Charles Francis Jenkins

20 John Baird / first TV face

21 Vladimir Zworykin

22 Icononscope – the camera

23 Kinescope – the receiver

24 Cathode ray tube

25 Philo Farnsworth

26 Farnsworth won the lawsuit against Zworykin and RCA over who invented the kinescope and the iconoscope. Thus, he’s known as “the father of television.”

27 RCA now had to pay Farnsworth royalties to license his patents RCA now had to pay Farnsworth royalties to license his patents Sarnoff said of RCA that it was determined “to collect patent royalties, not pay them.” Sarnoff said of RCA that it was determined “to collect patent royalties, not pay them.”

28 Date of demonstration Date of demonstration 1930 1930 1931 1931 1933 1933 1936 1936 1939 1939 1941 1941 No. of picture lines 60 lines 120 lines 240 lines 343 lines 441 lines 525 lines

29 Felix the Cat image – 1929, 1937

30 FDR opening 1939 World’s Fair

31 Television started broadcasting in 1939 Television started broadcasting in 1939 World War II World War II brought everything to a halt

32 Post-war RCA 630 set RCA gave the plans to other companies Set sales skyrocketed: In 1946 – 6,000 In 1952 – 21,782,000

33 Began broadcasting again in 1946 as basically “radio with pictures”

34 Radio with pictures

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37 TV essentially stole radio’s programming – dramas, comedies, variety shows, talk shows, game shows, sports, news. All programming was done live.

38 The Ruggles / Mama/ Mr. Peepers

39 Milton Berle Sid Caesar

40 Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz

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47 The death of live shows

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49 CBS’ field sequential color wheel

50 CRT action

51 RCA color TV – 1954

52 Shut up!


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