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Contributing Authors Include P. B. Williamson, Tom Van De Car,
Willis O. C. Ellis And Others.
Contributing Authors Include E. W. Meyers, Leon V. Almirall, Homer
Lee Evans And Others.
Contributing Authors Include J. C. Watkins, John Knowles Gowen,
Jr., V. E. Lynch And Others.
Contributing Authors Include Henry Marion Hall, Eldon Robbins, Jack
Parks And Others.
Contributing Authors Include Earle Gage, James W. Stuber, Earl F.
Hilfiker And Others.
Contributing Authors Include J. C. Watkins, John Knowles Gowen,
Jr., V. E. Lynch And Many Others.
Contributing Authors Include Claude M. Kreider, Philip H. Godsell,
L. N. Kilman And Others.
John Logie Baird is someone whose name is virtually unknown to most
Americans. He was a gifted Scotsman who managed to perfect the
world's first working television system. Baird announced his
invention while living in Great Britain in 1924 and a year later
provided a well-publicized public demonstration of his mechanical
television system at a famous London department store. The general
public, both in the United States and in Europe, was just beginning
to appreciate how radio was fast becoming an important part of
their everyday lives. Now they learned that someone had perfected a
way that both sound as well as pictures could be sent directly into
their homes. In 1927, Baird was able to transmit television signals
clear across the Atlantic Ocean from London to New York. Only 25
years before, Guglielmo Marconi sent coded wireless messages across
the same ocean, which at the time, was universally hailed as a
technological milestone that would literally change the world. The
following year, John Baird publicly demonstrated the world's first
means of transmitting color television images. He also invented
stereoscopic television and perfected a method of recording
television programs on disks. Using infrared imaging techniques he
developed a means that made it possible for television cameras to
"see in the dark." Calling his invention "Noctovision," his basic
methods were improved upon by others who perfected what we commonly
refer to today as radar. Before perfecting his television
inventions, Baird was a cunning and creative entrepreneur and
engineer who worked on a number of unusual and occasionally
successful business ventures. Although you may never had heard his
name before, Baird's story deserves to be told.
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