Hi!- My name is Albert and I have been invited over to this forum by my friend Wolfgang Mayer.
While watching his incredible home cinema with all the latest technology some days ago, we thought it would be interesting to think back to how it all started in the 1920s.
So many things we take for granted today were the result of much headache, suffering and heartburn by the intrepid inventors who dedicated their lives to the idea of “seeing by wireless” or “radiovision” as the early experiments were called.
I am by no means a historian of television, but I love to build things. So I started to research the early days with the idea to follow in the footsteps of the pioneers. I will try to let you follow this adventure.
Early television was a mechanical system. Before you laugh: Today’s sophisticated high end video projectors are full of mechanical parts. The creation of color images with a black and white DMD device makes use of the idea of the color wheel, projecting the base colors in sequence. The ultra miniaturized DMD device is itself a mechanical system for switching single pixels.
It all started in 1883 when a young German student named PAUL NIPKOW sat in his little flat in Berlin around Christmas time and longed to see his family and parents back in Pomerania, where he came from. A train ticket was too expensive for him, and so he sat down and conceived a method to transmit images on a telegraph line.
He came up with the idea of a fast-rotating disc with a series of holes punched into it. These holes were arranged in a spiral shape. A small window of the disc would be the scanning area. One hole in the disc traverses this window. As it exits the other side, the next hole moves across, but one hole diameter further to the inside of the disc. This way a scanning motion is imparted. the idea was so good it shaped the research and development of TV up until the 1930s when the first purely electronic tv systems started to emerge.
Young Nipkow patented his system as “electrical telescope” in 1883. But his invention came too early: Crucial parts of the system did not yet exist. There had to be a way to capture the light across the Nipkow disc, and to amplify the very small currents created by the incoming beam of light . The photoelectric cell using selenium as the light sensitive element was still a very new invention, and in 1883 there was no way to amplify its signal. The patent proposes a clever controllable light source but at the time thiscould not be realized. So Nipkow never made a dime from his invention.
While watching his incredible home cinema with all the latest technology some days ago, we thought it would be interesting to think back to how it all started in the 1920s.
So many things we take for granted today were the result of much headache, suffering and heartburn by the intrepid inventors who dedicated their lives to the idea of “seeing by wireless” or “radiovision” as the early experiments were called.
I am by no means a historian of television, but I love to build things. So I started to research the early days with the idea to follow in the footsteps of the pioneers. I will try to let you follow this adventure.
Early television was a mechanical system. Before you laugh: Today’s sophisticated high end video projectors are full of mechanical parts. The creation of color images with a black and white DMD device makes use of the idea of the color wheel, projecting the base colors in sequence. The ultra miniaturized DMD device is itself a mechanical system for switching single pixels.
It all started in 1883 when a young German student named PAUL NIPKOW sat in his little flat in Berlin around Christmas time and longed to see his family and parents back in Pomerania, where he came from. A train ticket was too expensive for him, and so he sat down and conceived a method to transmit images on a telegraph line.
He came up with the idea of a fast-rotating disc with a series of holes punched into it. These holes were arranged in a spiral shape. A small window of the disc would be the scanning area. One hole in the disc traverses this window. As it exits the other side, the next hole moves across, but one hole diameter further to the inside of the disc. This way a scanning motion is imparted. the idea was so good it shaped the research and development of TV up until the 1930s when the first purely electronic tv systems started to emerge.
Young Nipkow patented his system as “electrical telescope” in 1883. But his invention came too early: Crucial parts of the system did not yet exist. There had to be a way to capture the light across the Nipkow disc, and to amplify the very small currents created by the incoming beam of light . The photoelectric cell using selenium as the light sensitive element was still a very new invention, and in 1883 there was no way to amplify its signal. The patent proposes a clever controllable light source but at the time thiscould not be realized. So Nipkow never made a dime from his invention.
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