frame left frame top frame right
television header image
frame bottom
 
MENU
ARTICLES
BOOKS
This Business of Television
This Business of Television
by Howard J. Blumenthal Oliver R. Goodenough Howard Blumenthal
Our Price: $23.10
Used from: $13.90

Four Arguments for the Elimination of Television
Four Arguments for the Elimination of Television
by Jerry Mander
Our Price: $11.16
Used from: $2.00

Successful Television Writing
Successful Television Writing
by Lee Goldberg William Rabkin
Our Price: $10.85
Used from: $5.94

Television Production Handbook
Television Production Handbook
by Herbert Zettl
Our Price: $120.76
Used from: $111.50

Lighting for Digital Video & Television, Second Edition
Lighting for Digital Video & Television, Second Edition
by John Jackman
Our Price: $27.69
Used from: $25.17

A Brief Introduction To The History Of Television

Television, often referred to as the ‘idiot box’, has become one of the basic necessities of modern living. One cannot imagine how much influence it has had on everyone’s life since its invention. Famous talk shows like the Oprah Winfrey’s show or that of David Letterman has become part of the staple diet of Americans. Hollywood would not be as thriving as it is today without the emergence of television that has created a large audience for its movies. The ‘TV’ is ubiquitous in its presence and is part of nearly every American home. The television industry has given rise to a host of related activity, from production of ‘software or content’ for the TV shows to ‘hardware’ like TV components, TV broadcasting and the like. The history of television is a long one with several theories and inventions contributing to the present day device.

 

Timeline of the history of television

The basic foundations of modern day television broadcasting were laid as far back as 1831 when Michael Faraday and Joseph Henry discovered electromagnetism that later led to the discovery of electronic communication. Many other scientists worked on how to transmit static images electronically in the years 1862 and 1900.

May and Smith showed in 1873 how to convert the light reflected from static images to electronic signals using selenium. The idea of cathode ray tubes which converted electronic signals back into images then emerged and Eugen Goldstein is credited with first using the term cathode rays.

In 1884, Paul Nipkow created a mechanical TV using rotating disk with lamp as the light source. This TV had a resolution of eighteen lines and he called it electric telescope. The word ‘television’ was first used by the Russian Constantin Perskyi in 1900 at the first International Electricity Congress held as part of World Fair in Paris. We may consider this as the beginning of the history of television as we know today. Many theories like the electromagnetic wave theory put forth by scientists then contributed to the idea of transmission of continuous images over wires but there were many hurdles like absence of necessary field for transmission.

The invention of iconoscope, which functioned like a TV camera, in 1923 by Vladimir Zworkin laid the foundations of modern TV technology. It was based on the concept of sending images using cathode ray tubes put forth by Campbell Swinton and Boris Rosing. Since then the history of television has seen efforts being targeted at increasing the image resolution, starting from 30 lines initially. This screen definition was of poor quality with small details being ignored. Higher and higher definition screens have been produced since 1926 and broadcasting companies began to emerge that could broadcast high quality images.

PRODUCTS

SPONSORED LINKS
 
 
Invention Of The Camera Headlines

Analog's twilight: Slowly, digital trumps physical - The Associated Press


The Associated Press

Analog's twilight: Slowly, digital trumps physical
The Associated Press - 2 hours ago
Every invention that reconfigured our relationship with information, from the telegraph to the telephone to television to Facebook, was greeted with the ...

Read more...


Canon patents fuel cell DSLR - Portalino


Canon patents fuel cell DSLR
Portalino, Italy - Oct 12, 2008
... it looks like we can no-so elusively safely say where the camera is being developed. The patent itself is straight up enough: "The present invention ...

Read more...


Screen Test: The John Logie Baird story comes to life - Scotsman


Screen Test: The John Logie Baird story comes to life
Scotsman, United Kingdom - Oct 9, 2008
His invention would transform society unima ginably, yet it is only now, almost 80 years on, that the drama surrounding the invention of the small screen is ...

Read more...


Inventor, auto motives clash in ‘Flash’ - Boston Herald


Inventor, auto motives clash in ‘Flash’
Boston Herald, United States - Oct 3, 2008
But I could not figure out why Dante Spinotti’s camera was bobbing in interior shots. Moreover, “Flash of Genius” was so predictable and earnest it gave me ...
Director Marc Abraham tells story of common man with 'Genius' Baltimore Sun
Movie: A windshield-wiper obsession San Francisco Chronicle
"Flash of Genius" Movie Review About - News & Issues
Richmond Times Dispatch - PopMatters
all 470 news articles

Read more...


Joy of Six: Great newscasters - guardian.co.uk


Joy of Six: Great newscasters
guardian.co.uk, UK - Oct 7, 2008
A renowned boozer, Bosanquet - whose father Bernard, a cricketer for Middlesex, is credited with the invention of the googly - was often asked to prove his ...

Read more...


 
 
Copyright 2008. All rights reserved.
bottom bar