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zakruti.com » Knowledge, science, education » Crash Course
Cinema, Radio, and Television: Crash Course History of Science #29

Cinema, Radio, and Television: Crash Course History of Science #29

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Rating: 4.5; Vote: 2
Radio, Cinema, and Television have been staples in news coverage, entertainment, and education for almost 100 years. But. where did they all come from? Who started what and when and why? In this episode, Hank Green talks to us about their birth and a dead elephant Aspiah: Cinema, Radio, Television, and other forms of entertainment before was merely created out of innovation of telecommunication. Thomas Edison is very smart and intelligent. He invented a lot of technology which we can use it until now. I loved how it give more viewed on the improvisation of communication through processing and how the technology invented.
I'm very thankful as well as I'm proud for all the devices creation that oir scientists invented because it serve as our tool which make our life easier today.

Date: 2022-04-04

Comments and reviews: 9


J. c. bose first in 1889 demonstrated publicaly bose's coherer which was smarty stolen by g. marconi in the name of italian navy coherer and consequently j. c. bose was overshadowed. without this coherer g. marconi would have never been successful. j. c bose actually didnot pledge to the court against g. marconi for copying j. c bose method. before the awful incident he never believed in patent. he believed that science is for mankind. he is not business.
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The radio adaptation of War of the Worlds that caused panic was on a less popular radio station. The more popular radio station started playing an opera about a minute into the broadcast of War of the Worlds, causing people to change the station a minute into the broadcast, so they missed the intro that made it clear that it was fiction.
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Jumping on the -outrage that you left out my personal favorite gypped historical figure- bandwagon -- you highlighted Baird but not Philo T. Farnsworth! That's like saying -Babbage deserves all credit for inventing the computer, all those electronics are just added polish. Who cares about Alan Turing or Tommy Flowers? -
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Disappointed with the discussion on the development of television. Focus should be on Zworykin and Farnsworth whose battle on the development of the electronic television was much more influential (and interesting) than the mechanical television. I may be biased though; )
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The life blood that fueled the emerging corporations was simply the discovery made and the knowledge behind ELECTRODYNAMICS. Radio, Cinema and television came into being and there emergence provided information to all humans the world over.
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And you didn't mention David Snarnoff. Yeah, he wasn't a scientist or engineer, and he royally ripped off Farnsworth. But he was more critical to making TV what it is and what it means to society than anyone else in history.
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-CrashCourse You did not mention Antonio Meucci as the inventor of the telephone, even though the 2002-06-11 resolution of the US House of Representative accredited him (and not Bell) with the invention of such a device.
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At least you weren't bowing to the shrine of Edison this episode. Still. he should be a footnote, not a highlight. If Edison had any impact at all, it was in stifling and slowing the advance of technology.
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Just a note that we mention -Media- a lot in this video and we're talking specifically about Audio/Video Media. Obviously, print was a standard media at the birth of Radio and TV. :)
- Nick J.

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