1843-1923: From Electromechanics To Electronics
1843-1923: From Electromechanics To Electronics
1843-1923: From Electromechanics To Electronics
Cinématographe camera by the Lumière brothers in 1895 (ref 86.5822) at the French
Museum of Photography in Bièvres, Essonne, France
1895: Auguste Lumiere's cinematograph displays moving images for the first time. In
the same year, brothers Emil and Max Skladanowskypresent their "Bioscop" in
Berlin.
1897
Ferdinand Braun invents the "inertialess cathode ray oscillograph tube", a
principle which remained unchanged in television picture tubes.
The Italian Guglielmo Marconi transmits wireless telegraph messages by
electromagnetic waves over a distance of five kilometers.
1898
The Danish physicist Valdemar Poulsen creates the world's first magnetic
recording and reproduction, using a 1 mm thick steel wire as a magnetizable
carrier.
Nikola Tesla demonstrated the first wireless remote control of a model ship.
1899: The dog "Nipper" is used in "His Master's Voice", the trademark for
gramophones and records.
1902
Otto von Bronk patented his "Method and apparatus for remote visualization of
images and objects with temporary resolution of the images in parallel rows of
dots". This patent, originally developed for phototelegraphy, impacted the
development of color television, particularly the NTSC implementation.
For the first time audio records are printed with paper labels in the middle.
1903: Guglielmo Marconi provides evidence that wireless telegraphic
communication is possible over long distances, such as across the Atlantic. He used
a transmitter developed by Ferdinand Braun.
1904
For the first time, double-sided records, and those with a diameter of 30 cm are
produced, increasing playing time up to 11 minutes (5.5 minutes per side).
These are created by Odeon in Berlin and debuted at the Leipzig Spring Fair.
The German physicist Arthur Korn developed the first practical method
for telegraphy.
1905: The Englishman Sir John Ambrose Fleming invents the first electron tube.
1906
Robert von Lieben patented his "inertia working cathode-ray-relays". By 1910 he
developed this into the first real tube amplifier, by creating a triode. His invention
of the triode is almost simultaneously created by the American Lee de Forest.
Max Dieckmann and Gustav Glage use the Braun tube for playback of 20-line
black-and-white images.
The first jukebox with records comes on the market.
American Brigadier General Henry Harrison Chase Dunwoody files for a patent
for a carborundum steel detector for use in a crystal radio, an improved version
of the Cat's-whisker detector. It is sometimes credited as the
first semiconductor in history. The envelope detector is an important part of
every radio receiver.
1907: Rosenthal puts in his image telegraph for the first time a photocell.
1911: First film studios are created in Hollywood and Potsdam- Babelsberg .
1912: The first radio receiver is created, in accordance with the Audion principle.
1913: The legal battle over the invention of the electron tube between Robert von
Lieben and Lee de Forest is decided. The electron tube is replaced by a
high vacuum in the glass flask with significantly improved properties.
Alexander Meissner patented his process "feedback for generating oscillations",
by his development of a radio station using an electron tube .
The Englishman Arthur Berry submits a patent on the manufacture of printed
circuits by etched metal.
1915: Carl Benedicks leads basic studies in Sweden on the electrical properties
of silicon and germanium. Due to the emerging tube technology, however, interest in
semiconductors remains low until after the Second World War.
1917
Based on previous findings of the Englishman Oliver Lodge, the Frenchman
Lucien Levy develops a radio receiver with frequency tuning using a resonant
circuit.
1919: Charlie Chaplin founded the Hollywood film production and distribution
company United Artists
1920: The first regularly operating radio station KDKA goes on air on 2 November
1920 in Philadelphia, USA. It is the first time electronics are used to transmit
information and entertainment to the public at large. The same year in Germany an
instrumental concert was broadcast on the radio from a long-wave transmitter in
Wusterhausen.
1922: J. McWilliams Stone invents the first portable radio receiver. George Frost
builds the first "car radio" in his Ford Model T.
1923
The 15-year-old Manfred von Ardenne is granted his first patent for an electron
tube having a plurality of electrodes. Siegmund Loewe (1885-1962) builds with
the tube his first radio receiver "Loewe Opta-".
The Hungarian engineer Dénes Mihály patented an image scanning with line
deflection, in which each point of an image is scanned ten times per second by a
selenium cell.
August Karolus (1893-1972) invents the Kerr cell, an almost inertia-free
conversion of electrical pulses into light signals. He was granted a patent for his
method of transmitting slides.
Vladimir Kosma developed the first television camera tube, the Ikonoskop, using
the Braun tube.
The German State Secretary Karl August Bredow founded the first
German broadcasting organization. By lifting the ban on broadcast reception and
the opening of the first private radio station, the development of radio as a mass
medium begins.
1924-1959: From cathode ray tube to stereo audio and TV[edit]
1924: the first radio receivers are exhibited at the Berlin Radio Show
1925
Brunswick Records in Dubuque, Iowa produced their first record player, the
Brunswick Panatrope with a pickup, amplifier and loudspeaker
In the American Bell Laboratories, a method for recording of records obtained by
microphone and tube amps for series production. Also in Germany working on it
is ongoing since 1922. 1925 appear the first electrically recorded disks in both
countries.
At the Leipzig Spring Fair, the first miniature camera "Leica" is presented to the
public.
John Logie Baird performs the first screening of a living head with a resolution of
30 vertical lines using a Nipkow disk.
August Karolus demonstrated in Germany television with 48 lines and ten image
changes per second.
1926
Edison developed the first "LP". By dense grooves (16 grooves on 1 mm) and
the reduction of speed to 80 min -1 (later 78 min -1 ) increases the playing time
up to 2 times 20 minutes. He carries himself with the decline of his phonograph
business.
The German State Railroad offers a cordless telephone service in moving trains
between Berlin and Hamburg - the idea of mobile telephony is born.
John Logie Baird developed the first commercial television set in the world. It
was not until 1930, he is called a " telescreen sold "at a price of 20 pounds.
1927
The first fully electronic music boxes ("Jukeboxes") used in the USA on the
market.
German Grammophon on sale due to a license agreement with the Brunswick-
Balke-Collender Company. Its first fully electronic turntables.
The first industrially manufactured car radio , the "Philco Transitone" from the
"Storage Battery Co." in Philadelphia, USA, comes on the market.
The first shortwave radio - Rundfunkübertragung overseas broadcast by the
station PCJJ the Philips factories in Eindhoven in the Dutch colonies.
Opening of the first regular telegraphy -Dienstes between Berlin and Vienna.
First commercial sound films ("The Jazz Singer", USA) using the "Needle sound"
back in sync with the film screening for LPs over loudspeakers.
First public television broadcasts in the UK by John Logie Baird between London
and Glasgow and in the USA by Frederic Eugene Ives (1882-1953) between
Washington and New York.
The American inventor Philo Taylor Farnsworth (1906-1971) developed in Los
Angeles, the first fully electronic television system in the world.
John Logie Baird developed his Phonovision, the first videodisc player. 30-line
television images are stored on shellac records. At 78 RPM mechanically
scanned, the images can be played back on his "telescreen". It could not play
sound nor keep up with the rapidly increasing resolution of television. More than
40 years later, commercial optical disc players came onto the market.
1928: Fritz Pfleumer got the first tape recorder patent. It replaces steel wire with
paper coated in iron powder. According to Valdemar Poulsen (1898) to the second
crucial pioneer of magnetic sound, image and data storage
Dénes Mihály presented in Berlin a small circle, the first authentic television
broadcast in Germany, having worked at least since 1923 in this field.
August Karolus and the company Telefunken put on the "fifth Great German
Radio Exhibition Berlin 1928" the prototype of a television receiver, with an
image size of 8 cm × 10 cm and a resolution of about 10,000 pixels, a much
better picture quality than previous devices.
In New York (USA) the first regular television broadcasts of the experiment
station WGY, operated by the General Electric Company (GE). Sporadic
television news and dramas radiate from these stations by 1928.
The first commercially produced television receiver of the Daven Corporation
in Newark is offered for $75.
John Logie Baird transmits the first television pictures internationally, and the
same across the Atlantic from London to New York. He also demonstrated the
world's first color television transmission in London.
1929
Edison withdraws from the phono business - the disk has ousted the cylinder.
The company Columbia Records developed the first portable record player that
can be connected to any tube radio. It also created the first radio / phonograph
combinations, the precursor to the 1960s music chests.