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Television Technology

Television Technology. Submitted to: Mr. Bouzane Submitted by: Robbie Collins. The first television ….

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Television Technology

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  1. Television Technology Submitted to: Mr. Bouzane Submitted by: Robbie Collins

  2. The first television … It wouldn’t be fair to give only one person all the credit for inventing the first television. Philo T. Farnsworth, Paul Nipkow, Vladimir Zworykin, Charles Jenkins and John Baird are the five people who contributed to the first television.

  3. Contribute to the first TV. In the 1920’s, John logie Baird patented the idea of using arrays of transparent rods to transmit images for television. John Logie Baird based his inventeionon Nipkow'sscanning disc idea. Paul Nipkow developed a rotating disc technology to transmit pictures over wires in 1884 called the Nipkow disc. He was the first person to discover the television scanning principle, in which light particles of an image are successfully analyzed and transmitted.

  4. Contribute to the first TV. Charles Jenkins invented a mechanical television called radio and transmitted the earliest moving silhouette images on june 14th, 1923. Vladimir Zworykin was a Russian-American inventor that invented a television transmitting and receiving system employing cathode ray tubes. He played a role of the development to the television from the early thirty's.

  5. Contribute to the first TV. Philo Farnsworth developed a television s, and is best known for the first fully functional all-electronic image pickup device, the first image dissector , the first fully functional electronic television system with receiver and camera and he was the first person to show this to the public.

  6. 3D TV The future …. The first television had a tiny screen but as the years went by the screen got bigger and bigger, now we have 3d TV’s and in the future we might even have virtual Tv.

  7. Television through the years ! In the 1930’s, the first real commercial TV became available and Sets were large pieces of equipment with about 12 inch screens. They cost about $400 to $500 and the average household income was about $1300 a year. In the 1940’s the hype of TVs was pushed to the side because of WW1 and the production was put on stop.

  8. In the 1950’s, colour tv’s came in and remote’s were invented. By the end of the decade, a 21-inch black and white set was about $200 and the average 21-inch color set was almost $500. In the 1960’s, by the end of the decade there were approximately 78 million television sets in homes across the United States; 200 million around the world.

  9. In 1970, the average television was $400- $700. the first direct to broadcast satellite television was launched in 1978. In the 1980’s, there became a growing number of television accessories, like the VCR and the Nintendo. And cable had a significant boom in the 80’s.

  10. In the 1990’s, plasma and LED television was being experimented. Televisions now included picture in picture, timers and parental controls. In the 2000’s, DVD players have token over theatre experience. At the beginning of the decade they were only in 7% of homes and in less then 10 years it has gone up to 80%. Less then 10 years later after the DVD players, they came out with HD DVD and Blu-ray. The tv goes online with the introduction to high speed internet and video streaming.

  11. The Future of The Television !! • The television of the future could be a see-through panel which vanishes when you turn it off - carrying on the current trend for ever-thinner sets. • or it may be stretched out longer and even though • can get internet on TV’s now they will have a more • advanced technology.

  12. Interesting facts • The television advertisement first broadcasted on 1st July, 1941 in New York. • NASA has announced that they have lost all of their original tapes of Apollo 11’s TV transmission in August, 2006. • The average American watches more than 4 hours of TV each day

  13. The future of television and electronic technology Heres a link to a day made of glass : http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6Cf7IL_eZ38 Here’s a link to a day in glass continued or a day in glass 2: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jZkHpNnXLB0&feature=relmfu

  14. Pros and cons of the television Cons You can become a couch potato Pros • Informational shows • The discovery channel • Educational shows

  15. Bibliography While doing this project I used the following sites to help with information: http://tv.toptenreviews.com/standard/television-through-the-decades-and-the-ways-it-changed-our-world.htm http://inventors.about.com/od/tstartinventions/a/Television.htm http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vladimir_K._Zworykin https://www.smpte.org/sections/hollywood/meeting-announcement-feb-17-2009 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philo_Farnsworth http://weirdfacts.com/fun-facts-a-stuff/3272-facts-about-television.html http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-2145852/Is-TV-future-pane-vanishes-turn-off.html

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