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Paul Julius Gottlieb Nipkow (22 August 1860 – 24 August 1940) was a German technician and inventor. He invented the Nipkow disk, which laid the foundation of television, since his disk was a fundamental component in the first televisions.
Paul Gottlieb Nipkow (born August 22, 1860, Lauenburg, Pomerania [now Lębork, Poland—died August 24, 1940, Berlin, Germany) was a German engineer who discovered television’s scanning principle, in which the light intensities of small portions of an image are successively analyzed and transmitted.
- The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
Jun 10, 2002 · Paul Gottlieb, publisher and editor in chief of Harry N. Abrams, died Wednesday at the age of sixty-seven. The highlights of Gottlieb’s twenty-two-year tenure included his celebrated discovery and publication of two previously unknown troves of art: Andrew Wyeth’s “Helga Pictures” and the Hermitage’s collection of Impressionist ...
Jun 6, 2002 · Paul Gottlieb, the former publisher and editor in chief of Harry N. Abrams, who helped bring lavishly illustrated fine-art books to a mainstream audience, died yesterday at his...
Jun 7, 2002 · Paul Gottlieb, whose prescience about the expanding public appetite for art led him to the top of the art publishing world, died of an apparent heart attack Wednesday at his home in New York.
Jun 10, 2002 · Paul Gottlieb, an influential figure in art book publishing and the former president, chairman and editor-in-chief of Harry N. Abrams, died at his home in Manhattan of an apparent heart...
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Aug 22, 2020 · Paul Nipkow (1860-1940) invented the Nipkow disk, a device that scanned images into a matrix of points and transmitted them electronically. He also patented the electric telescope and became the first president of the German television working group.