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  1. Kansai TV also achieved the first program broadcast from the seabed in the Japanese private TV industry in this year, and won the People's Congress Award for this. [4]: 9–10 were broadcast. At the beginning of the broadcast, since Kansai TV did not join any network, 95% of Kansai TV's programs were self-made except for news. [3]: 15–16

  2. The History of Kansai Television. 1958. Commences broadcasting. 1964. Commences color casting. 1967. “Ninja Akakage” color TV movie begins. 1970. Fuji Network ( 27 stations) is established.

    • 1831
    • 1862
    • 1873
    • 1876
    • The Late 1870s
    • 1880
    • 1884
    • 1900
    • 1906
    • 1907

    Joseph Henry's and Michael Faraday's work with electromagnetismjumpstarts the era of electronic communication.

    Abbe Giovanna Caselli invents his Pantelegraph and becomes the first person to transmit a still image over wires.

    Scientist Willoughby Smith experiments with selenium and light, revealing the possibility for inventors to transform images into electronic signals.

    Boston civil servant George Carey was thinking about complete television systems and in 1877 he put forward drawings for what he called a selenium camera that would allow people to see by electricity. Eugen Goldstein coins the term "cathode rays" to describe the light emitted when an electric current was forced through a vacuum tube.

    Scientists and engineers like Valeria Correa Vaz de Paiva, Louis Figuier, and Constantin Senlecq were suggesting alternative designs for telectroscopes.

    Inventors Alexander Graham Bell and Thomas Edisontheorize about telephone devices that transmit images as well as sound. Bell's photophoneused light to transmit sound and he wanted to advance his device for image sending. George Carey builds a rudimentary system with light-sensitive cells.

    Paul Nipkowsends images over wires using a rotating metal disk technology calling it the electric telescope with 18 lines of resolution.

    At the World's Fair in Paris, the first International Congress of Electricity was held. That is where Russian Constantin Perskyi made the first known use of the word "television." Soon after 1900, the momentum shifted from ideas and discussions to the physical development of television systems. Two major paths in the development of a television sys...

    Lee de Forest invents the Audion vacuum tube that proves essential to electronics. The Audion was the first tube with the ability to amplify signals. Boris Rosing combines Nipkow's disk and a cathode ray tube and builds the first working mechanical TV system.

    Campbell Swinton and Boris Rosing suggest using cathode ray tubes to transmit images. Independent of each other, they both develop electronic scanning methods of reproducing images.

  3. Later a fifth standard was added with the French 625-line standard. ^ Rollout for NHK started in 1953 in Kanto, 1954 in Tokai and Kansai and between 1956 and 1958 for the rest of Japan. For commercial TV, limited to Kanto from 1953 to 1955 (NTV and KRT) and spread between 1956 and 1963 to the rest of the country.

    • Kevin Raposo
    • The 1920s: The First Working TV. In 1924, Scottish inventor John Baird invented the first TV made of things he found, such as cardboard and a bicycle lamp.
    • The 1930s: The First Electric TVs. The Baird Televisor from 1929 was a mechanical television set and soon became obsolete after electric televisions (easier to mass produce) became available.
    • The 1940s: Network Television. By the late 1940s, the price of TVs had dropped, so many more people than ever before were able to watch television for the first time.
    • The 1950s-1960: Remote Controls, Daytime TV, and Sitcoms. The first TV remote was invented in 1950, but since TV had been popular without it for the last decade, not many people bought it.
  4. Jul 12, 2021 · A Brief History of Television, By Decade. Published Jul 12, 2021 at 6:30 PM EDT. By Seth Berkman, Stacker. FOLLOW. Many Americans received their first taste of TV during the 1939 World's Fair in ...

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  6. History of television. Family watching TV, 1958. The concept of television is the work of many individuals in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The first practical transmissions of moving images over a radio system used mechanical rotating perforated disks to scan a scene into a time-varying signal that could be reconstructed at a ...

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