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First television ever invented
The fist tv was invented by philo farnsworth, others were made but his was first demonstrated to the public. -
Cbs colored tv approved as national standard
Cbs coloed tv is approved as the national stabdard by the federal communications comission -
first colored tv
It was created in a lab by several scientists and engineers -
first show aired
cbs television air the firs colored show, it featured ed sullavin and was in four different cities also -
first live tv show
live broadcasts became a thing and then eventully some shows became live like snl(1975) -
First plasma screen tv
The flat screen TV was co-invented by University of Illinois " Read more : http://www.ehow.com/facts_5407609_history-flat-screen-tv.html -
first flat screen tv
first flat pannel display was created by many engineers -
first led tv
British experimenter H.J. Round first reported a light-emoting diode in 1907. In 1962, Nick Holonyak Jr. invented the first usable LED while at General Electric. James P. Mitchell invented the first LED television panel in 1977 -
first lcd tv
LCD displays began to gain in popularity in the 1980s, as they used less power. The competition between the two technologies forced even more improvements in plasma technology. In 1987, the IBM company sold its plasma display manufacturing plant to a small company called Plasmaco, founded by Larry Weber, Stephen Globus and James Kehoe. Using color plasma display technology perfected in Japan, Plasmaco paired up with Panasonic to manufacture color plasma displays in the United States. Color plasm -
first projector
"Contrary to popular belief, Thomas Edison did not invent the first Motion Picture Projector. There are many contenders, some depending on how "motion picture" is defined, but Edison is the worst of all possible answers. As the Richmond Telegram and The Photographic Times documented, in June 1894 Charles Francis Jenkins visited his boyhood home of Richmond, Indiana to exhibit his "motion picture projecting box" to his family, friends and newsmen. The Phantoscope, as he called it, projected a"