John Logie Baird invented the mechanical television. And, it was actually Philo Farnsworth, not Vladimir Zworykin that invented the electronic television. Alas, he was not an employee of RCA...
Between the 1920s,and 1940s, there was a number of inventors racing against the clock, trying to be the first to claim the invention,Zworkin was first,Farnsworth had a patent, but Baird, and Zworkin were at least 10 years ahead.
Blue Nelson just to let you know that little trinket you ground in thr river..be very carefull this item.yiu picked up.was hand made its. VOODOO.AND VERY POWERFULL AND YOU SHOULD NOT BE DABBELING IN A DARK WORLD
@@erin19030 @Jim Haldeman of course it was of poor quality, but Baird gave the world's first demonstration of true television before 50 scientists in central London in early 1926. In 1928 he also achieved the first transatlantic television transmission between London and New York and the first transmission to a ship in mid-Atlantic. He's also credited with giving the first demonstration of both color and stereoscopic television. So all in all, worth a decent mention, no?
Of note, RCA once had the largest color television factory in the world in Bloomington. Today it is abandoned.
My great grandfather used to worked there.
John Logie Baird invented the mechanical television. And, it was actually Philo Farnsworth, not Vladimir Zworykin that invented the electronic television. Alas, he was not an employee of RCA...
Between the 1920s,and 1940s, there was a number of inventors racing against the clock, trying to be the first to claim the invention,Zworkin was first,Farnsworth had a patent, but Baird, and Zworkin were at least 10 years ahead.
Blue Nelson just to let you know that little trinket you ground in thr river..be very carefull this item.yiu picked up.was hand made its. VOODOO.AND VERY POWERFULL AND YOU SHOULD NOT BE DABBELING IN A DARK WORLD
perhaps I'm missing something, but wasn't TV invented by John Logie Baird?
no
It was only one of the first ideas, but of poor quality.
@@erin19030 @Jim Haldeman of course it was of poor quality, but Baird gave the world's first demonstration of true television before 50 scientists in central London in early 1926. In 1928 he also achieved the first transatlantic television transmission between London and New York and the first transmission to a ship in mid-Atlantic. He's also credited with giving the first demonstration of both color and stereoscopic television.
So all in all, worth a decent mention, no?
🙂rifftrax needs to make fun of this