[opendtv] Re: Broadcasting is 100 years old
- From: flyback1 <flyback1@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- To: opendtv@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
- Date: Tue, 26 Dec 2006 20:19:54 -0500
http://hardware.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=06/12/23/1327237&from=rss
"On Christmas eve 1906
<http://www.southgatearc.org/news/december2006/king_of_the_radio_waves.htm>,
a Canadian physicist named Reginald Fessenden
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reginald_Fessenden> presented the world's
first wireless radio broadcast from his transmitter at Brant Rock, MA.
The transmission included Christmas music and was heard by radio
operators on board US Navy and United Fruit Company ships equipped with
Fessenden's wireless receivers at various distances over the South and
North Atlantic, and in the West Indies. Fessenden was a key rival of
Marconi <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guglielmo_Marconi> in the early
1900s who, using morse-code, succeeded in passing signals across the
Atlantic in 1901. Fessenden's work was the first real departure from
Marconi's damped-wave-coherer system for telegraphy
<http://www.ieee.ca/millennium/radio/radio_differences.html> and
represent the first pioneering steps toward radio communications and
radio broadcasting. He later became embroiled in a long-running legal
dispute over the control of his radio-related patents, which were
eventually acquired by RCA."
John Willkie wrote:
Apparently, I was wrong on the date. It was december 24th 1906.
John Willkie
------------------------------------------------------------------------
From: opendtv-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:opendtv-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of John Willkie
Sent: Tuesday, December 26, 2006 2:41 PM
To: opendtv@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [opendtv] Broadcasting is 100 years old
Unless I've done something wrong with my math, within an hour of my
sending this message, "broadcasting" will be 100 years old.
Broadcasting in the sense of electronic wireless communications
transmitted from a single point and intended for simultaneous
reception by members of the general public at multiple locations.
The event was of course the transmission, on Cape Cod, on the evening
of December 26, 1906, by Professor Reginald E. Fessenden, of poetry
and a musical selection. Not a single dot-dash.
Since there were few to none receivers (the Audion tube was a few
years in the future), I've never heard of any reception reports.
May broadcasting's next 100 years be as dynamic and prolific as the
last 100.
John Willkie
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Apparently, I was wrong on the date. It was december 24th 1906.
John Willkie
------------------------------------------------------------------------From: opendtv-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:opendtv-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of John Willkie
Sent: Tuesday, December 26, 2006 2:41 PM To: opendtv@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: [opendtv] Broadcasting is 100 years oldUnless I've done something wrong with my math, within an hour of my sending this message, "broadcasting" will be 100 years old.
Broadcasting in the sense of electronic wireless communications transmitted from a single point and intended for simultaneous reception by members of the general public at multiple locations.
The event was of course the transmission, on Cape Cod, on the evening of December 26, 1906, by Professor Reginald E. Fessenden, of poetry and a musical selection. Not a single dot-dash.
Since there were few to none receivers (the Audion tube was a few years in the future), I've never heard of any reception reports.
May broadcasting's next 100 years be as dynamic and prolific as the last 100.
John Willkie
- [opendtv] Re: Broadcasting is 100 years old
- From: flyback1
- [opendtv] Re: Broadcasting is 100 years old
- From: John Willkie
- [opendtv] Re: Broadcasting is 100 years old
- From: John Willkie