TV
Money Gottlieb Nip Kow patented the first electromechanical television in 1884. People believe that he was never able to design the prototype. Until 1907, when the prototype was designed experimentally. Between 1907 and 1910, Boris Rosing and Vladimir Zurikin, a student of education, demonstrated a television system using a mechanical mirror finder on the display and an electronic Lib Brown on the receiver. Rossing disappeared during the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917, but Zurikin later worked for the RAC to build an electronic television, the design of which was eventually given to him by PhilotilorForce Force. A similar semi-mechanical television was first shown in London, shown in February 1924 by Jean-Lucie Baird with the image of Felix the Cat and Bird's animated image on October 30, 1925. The Baird system was eventually rebuilt by the BBC.
Electronic TV
Although Nip Koff, Rosing, Baird were fantastic. A small part of their technology was used in today's television. By 1934, all other electromechanical television systems were out of fashion. Campbell Swinton wrote a letter to Nature magazine on June 18, 1908, describing the use of cathode rays in electric television, invented by Carl Ferdinand Brown. He theorized that electron beams could be used in both the camera and the receiver, which could rotate electronically to produce moving images. He gave a lecture on a subject in 1911 and showed a diagram that no one, not even Swinton, could understand his design, his system was never built.
The all-electronic system was first introduced by Philo Taylor of France in the fall of 1927. Fran Morse Farm Mormon A boy from Idaho, he first considered the system when he was 14 years old. He debated the first idea with his high school chemistry teacher, who thought it would not work for no reason (Frances Wares later proved to his teacher Justin Talman that he had put a key to his invention). He was pursuing his idea at Brigham Young Academy (now Brigham Young University).
At the age of 21, he demonstrated a user system in his personal laboratory in San Francisco. All modern TVs follow his design directly. Vladimir Zurikin is known as the father of electronic television for his useful invention of the iconoscope in 1923 and the invention of the kinscope in 1929. His design was one of the first to feature a television system. His previous work with Rossing on electromechanical television taught him how to build a system, but his claim and that of the RCA, who was their original invention, is futile for three reasons:
Zurikin's 1923 score showed an unfinished plan, unable to do what he wanted to do (it took until 1923 for Zurikin to get his plan done).
The 1923 concession application was not accepted until 1938 and was not seriously accepted.
The court found that the RCA had infringed on a television scheme granted by Philo Taylor of France. The difference was whether it was Frances Worcesz or Zurikin who invented television today. Some claim that when Frances Wars first wanted to build it, it was the RCA that first bought and sold the TV, and it was RCA employees who wrote the date of the invention of the TV. Although Frances Worsz won the legal battle against this issue, he was never able to fully invest in his invention.
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