Everything Television Book: Lighting for Digital Video & Television
Lighting for Digital Video & Television

Everything Television Book: Story: Substance, Structure, Style and The Principles of Screenwriting
Story: Substance, Structure, Style and The Principles of Screenwriting

Everything Television Book: How to Write a Selling Screenplay
How to Write a Selling Screenplay

Everything Television Book: This Business of Television
This Business of Television

Everything Television Book: Sex and the City: Kiss and Tell
Sex and the City: Kiss and Tell

Everything Television Book: Writing Television Sitcoms
Writing Television Sitcoms

Everything Television Book: Four Arguments for the Elimination of Television
Four Arguments for the Elimination of Television

Everything Television Book: War Stories: Operation Iraqi Freedom (With DVD)
War Stories: Operation Iraqi Freedom (With DVD)

Everything Television Book: Television Production Handbook With Infotrac
Television Production Handbook With Infotrac

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Guides: Television - Articles - John Logie Baird - Wikipedia

John Logie Baird

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John Logie Baird (b. August 13, 1888, d. June 14, 1946) of Scotland (University of Glasgow) was the first to invent a working system of television capable of showing moving images with shades of grey. Baird demonstrated his system to the Royal Institution and a reporter from The Times on January 26, 1926 in the Soho district of London.

From 1929 onwards, the BBC made broadcasts using the Baird television system, alternating these with broadcasts of electronic scanning system television signals during the 1930s, until it finally discontinued broadcasts of the Baird system in 1937.

Baird's mechanical television system was replaced by the electronic television system described by A.A. Campbell-Swinton and later developed by inventors such as Philo T. Farnsworth and Vladimir Zworykin.

Baird never stopped inventing. His 1928 invention called the Phonodisc was basically a 78rpm record that could play a 30 line video signal. Shortly before his death he demonstrated his own colour television system, which had 1000 lines of definition and good picture quality. It was not compatible with existing black and white television so was never adopted.

   

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See also

Everything Television Book: Lighting for Digital Video & Television
Lighting for Digital Video & Television
  Everything Television Book: Story: Substance, Structure, Style and The Principles of Screenwriting
Story: Substance, Structure, Style and The Principles of Screenwriting
  Everything Television Book: How to Write a Selling Screenplay
How to Write a Selling Screenplay
  Everything Television Book: This Business of Television
This Business of Television
 
Everything Television Book: Sex and the City: Kiss and Tell
Sex and the City: Kiss and Tell
  Everything Television Book: Writing Television Sitcoms
Writing Television Sitcoms
  Everything Television Book: Four Arguments for the Elimination of Television
Four Arguments for the Elimination of Television
  Everything Television Book: War Stories: Operation Iraqi Freedom (With DVD)
War Stories: Operation Iraqi Freedom (With DVD)
 
Everything Television Book: Television Production Handbook With Infotrac
Television Production Handbook With Infotrac
   
From http://en2.wikipedia.org/wiki/Logie_Baird
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