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100
Invention of Codex
Codex was invented by the Christians and also referred to as the prototype of a book -
1500
Invention of Paper and Print (15th century)
The technology was already paper. Revolution in printing took place.
Johan Gutenberg invented the printing technology which is called movable type machine. Printing presses have been established in 242 cities across various countries, mostly in Western Europe. -
The First Newspapers (17th Century)
In the early 17th century, newspapers were very different than the current versions. The first true newspaper published in Britain was the Oxford Gazette. -
More Newspapers... (Late 1600s)
Newspapers was made a regular feature in England. -
Emergence of Free Press
Free press emerged as a strong rhetoric against authoritarian states. Free press is the freedom of communication and expression through various mediums, media and published materials. -
Rise of Adversarial Press
Adversarial press has the ability to conduct dialogue and even argue with the government which was triggered by the imposition of taxes on paper by the British empire so it could generate the much-needed revenues to finance its laws. -
Development of Newsletter in the Philippines
Aviso al Publico — Published in the Philippines 1779 and was edited by Acting Governor General Miguel Fernandez de Folgueras to keep the people informed of the events then taking place in Europe. -
First Newspaper in the Philippines
Del Superior Govierno was the first actual newspaper. It was launched by Gov. Fernandez del Forgueras. -
Rise of News-writing in the Philippines (19th century)
Bussaco, La Pilantrofia, Registro Mercantil, and more newspapers are published and more Filipinos are getting to know about the news outside and inside the Philippines. -
The Invention of Edison Vitascope
Edison vitascope, a development technology of film by Thomas Edison. -
Using the word "Television"
The word “television” was used in magazine called the Scientific American. -
First Telecast
First telecast of a television took place. On January 13 of the same year, Dr. Ernst Frederik Werner Alexanderson performs the first successful public television broadcast and in September 11, The first broadcast of a play by television, The Queen's Messenger, on General Electric's W2XAD, Schenectady, New York. -
Radio Operation
Radio operation of America introduced electronic scanning, a much-improved technology from the mechanical scanning. -
The Creation of Z1
First programmable computer. The Z1 was created by German Konrad Zuse in his parents' living room between 1936 and 1938. It is considered to be the first electro-mechanical binary programmable computer, and the first really functional modern computer. -
First President to appear on the Tube
US President Franklin D. Roosevelt became the first president to appear on the tube. -
Commercial Television
Commercial television came into being in the United States. -
Invention of Transistor Radio Signals
Invention of transistor radio signals and the development of semi-conductor devices is considered the foundation of the modern electronics. -
701
Shipped the first electronic computers called 701 in the industry by IBM (International Business Machines). -
Commercial Television in the Philippines
Commercial Television was launched in the Philippines but as early as 1946, there were already exploration on the technology of broadcasting. Commercial broadcasters use advertising to fund their broadcasting operations for a profit. -
Creation of ARPANET
The Advanced Research Projects Agency Network (ARPANET) was created and considered as the predecessor of the internet. The ARPANET was an early packet switching network. ARPANET also became the technical foundation of the Internet. -
The Transition to Internet
The transition from ARPANET to internet commenced serve more purposes other than catering to the military. -
TCP/TIP Architecture
The first innovation of internet was the TCP/TIP architecture and was universally adopted. TCP/IP protocols map to a four-layer conceptual model known as the DARPA model , named after the U.S. government agency that initially developed TCP/IP. The four layers of the DARPA model are: Application, Transport, Internet, and Network Interface.