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#1
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Who Is Philo Farnsworth
Any one catch Jeopardy on Friday? Mark Cuban gave a video answer (I can't quite recall exactly what it was exactly) and I immediately yelled at the screen "WHO IS PHILO FARNSWORTH"! I quickly realized that none of the contestants were going to answer. Sadly game show history is no better for Philo in 2013 than it was in 1957.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=86jExgzinDQ |
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#2
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Farnsworth's lab building in San Francisco is a cool place of pilgrimage for old TV buffs. An easy walk from Fisherman's Wharf.
http://www.noehill.com/sf/landmarks/cal0941.asp http://www.sfmuseum.net/hist10/philo.html |
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#3
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H-hs_0oSDxY
Watch this if you never saw it before. It's facinating. Last edited by decojoe67; 01-13-2013 at 06:48 PM. |
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#4
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Quote:
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#5
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Somewhere I just read that US patent for television was later registered in 1930, was this the same as Philo's?
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| Audiokarma |
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#6
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For anyone wishing to read more, a PDF of his life is archived here:
http://www.earlytelevision.org/pdf/s...00everrich.pdf |
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#7
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From what I've read, & been able to "Read between the lines", Farnsworth was a likable chap, pretty unassuming...Even Gen Sarnoff, who usually held competitors/rivals in low regard, apparently liked the affable Farnsworth...
__________________
Benevolent Despot |
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#8
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I was also watching Jeopardy. They said he was from Utah, but he was only born there. He moved to Idaho as a child and he invented electronic TV when he lived in Idaho. For the sake of television history, he's an Idahoan.
Some day I'll make a pilgrimage to the Farnsworth et. al. museum in Rigby, Idaho. |
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#9
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Quote:
Thanks Carl
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CW 1950 Zenith Porthole - "Lincoln" |
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#10
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RCA's Sarnoff was a tough ruthless CEO - but he kept RCA/NBC in the front.
Subsequent CEO's were not as capable and ran the company in the ground. Carl
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CW 1950 Zenith Porthole - "Lincoln" |
| Audiokarma |
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#11
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I was watching Jeopardy, too, and screaming the answer.
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#12
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There is no such thing as "the" patent for TV. There are certain significant ones.
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#13
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And Philo didn't "invent" electronic TV. He was one of several people who added significantly to its development.
Here is what I consider a balanced look at the question of who made the first working electronic camera: http://www.earlytelevision.org/who_was_first.html Last edited by Steve McVoy; 01-14-2013 at 11:23 AM. |
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#14
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It seems like a bit of a stretch, an embellishment by historians perhaps, that the line-by-line scanning idea came from watching plowed rows of furrows. Line-by-line scanning (or "rastering") was already being done mechanically by flying-spot (spinning disc) scanners. Young Philo's epiphany, if there was one, had to be on doing the flying-spot thingy with an electron beam
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#15
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I think why I have been fascintated with radio and TV all my life is the incredible ammount of combined brian-power, money, and efforts of so many people to bring it to being. It was/is a true miracle come true!
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| Audiokarma |
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