E8: Countdown #99: The Franklin Institute - 1934
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このコンテンツについて
In the 1930s, video technology evolved rapidly in a world-wide race to deliver television to the marketplace.
In the United States, the principal contestants were the giant Radio Corporation of America and a tiny company spearheaded by the wunderkind inventor from Utah by way of San Francisco, Philo T. Farnsworth.
RCA had the capital, the technical resources, and the market clout to extend their dominance in all things radio into the nascent new industry of television.
All Farnsworth had were the fundamental patents for the technology that made television possible
In the spring of 1934, Farnsworth accepted an invitation from the prestigious Franklin Institute of Philadelphia to conduct the world’s first full-scale public demonstration of television in the summer of 1934.