Philo Farnsworth on I've Got A Secret

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 28 окт 2024

Комментарии • 238

  • @Stcroiss
    @Stcroiss 13 лет назад +222

    Right at the end, He's says he's working on making TV's with an excess of 2000 lines. That's HDTV.
    Also he says he's trying to make just a screen with the picture pasted on, that's a flatscreen.
    And then, as if that wasn't enough, he just casually drops the seed for digital cameras.
    This man was amazing!
    -Jacob

  • @ballaholic250
    @ballaholic250 15 лет назад +29

    Philo was the real deal. We need to remember these men who still can inspire youth to solve problems today.

  • @lungbrown
    @lungbrown 14 лет назад +92

    Am I the only one noticing that in the last two minutes of this clip, The REAL Dr. Farnsworth makes these predictions for the future: HDTV's, Flat Screen TV's, Digital Video Cameras, DVR's, and Fusion Power?! Is this for real?

    • @Bloke-q9b
      @Bloke-q9b 10 месяцев назад +2

      Exactly! Even the basis for video compression when he mentions parts of scenes that can be stored in memory.

    • @deeparks472
      @deeparks472 6 месяцев назад

      One of his friends was Einstein

  • @Iconoclasher
    @Iconoclasher 4 года назад +20

    Where he's talking about electronic "memory file".... That's how digital TV file compression works. The TV holds the image til it gets new information and the screen pixel changes. (DVDs and Blu-rays work similarly)
    Truly a remarkable visionary!

    • @pigs18
      @pigs18 3 года назад +5

      Yeah, he's literally describing a frame buffer, nearly fifty years before it came to be.

    • @ordinaryk
      @ordinaryk 9 месяцев назад

      Farnsworth was developing technology based on components that hadn't been invented yet, on the assumption that they would be in the near future, and sure enough, the integrated circuit (aka the microchip) was invented in 1959, along with chip-based memory in 1970. LCD flat panel screens first showed up in the 1980s. Experimental digital broadcasting began in the 80s, and finally around 2000, the transition to digital TV began, over 4 decades after Farnsworth's appearance on I've Got a Secret.

    • @Iconoclasher
      @Iconoclasher 9 месяцев назад

      @@ordinaryk Thanks for the update and clarification. 😊

  • @MrUnidyne
    @MrUnidyne 15 лет назад +45

    Your great great uncle is one of the world's most underrated geniuses, and the respect and recognition he deserves is long overdue.

  • @omore
    @omore 12 лет назад +8

    For all the mixed blessings television has brought us, this man is a true American genius. We have seen the moon landing, the horrors of Vietnam and countries rise and fall from the comfort of our own living rooms. The 20th century was witnessed and shaped because of his invention and we all need to remember his name. In True Awe. GREAT VIDEO!

  • @nthomas87
    @nthomas87 4 года назад +30

    Holy shit, this guy was waaaaay ahead of his time. It’s almost eerie how prophetic his words were. Incredible.

  • @deepfreezevideo
    @deepfreezevideo 14 лет назад +12

    A mild mannered, self-effacing man, yet possessed of an extraordinary intelligence.
    After looking at pictures of his happy family it seems that Farnsworth enjoyed what all great geniuses need most, a sense of humor and the warm support of one's peers.
    Imagine what would have been possible if Tesla had such similar luck.

  • @kurtvonfricken6829
    @kurtvonfricken6829 Год назад +4

    Ironically, this was the only time he ever appeared on television.

  • @SamKhan95
    @SamKhan95 15 лет назад +122

    This man should be remembered just as well as Edison.

    • @thomaspiccirillo6820
      @thomaspiccirillo6820 6 лет назад +1

      SamKhan95 TOUCHÉ SAM ABSO DEFINITELY

    • @deuxpomme9777
      @deuxpomme9777 6 лет назад +12

      Edison was a bad person

    • @mochroisierra6719
      @mochroisierra6719 4 года назад +12

      Nikola Tesla instead

    • @bobdole27
      @bobdole27 2 года назад +1

      He got screwed over by Sarnoff and the RCA, just all the true revolutionaries at the time like Tesla, and Alexanderson

    • @SemenTheSailor
      @SemenTheSailor 2 года назад +4

      No Edison was a terrible bastard who took credit for others work. Like others said Nikola Tesla would be more accurate. In reality he’s neither, he’s Farsnworth, and that name should be remembered. He shouldn’t be the “Edison of TV” he has created his own waves, he’s Dr Farsnworth.

  • @drobbi
    @drobbi 12 лет назад +8

    One of the coolest people ever. His idea for lines of resolution, which solved a thorny problem in TV's development, derived from observing the rows of corn planted on the farms near his boyhood home. How's that for imaginative transposition?

  • @captainjookie
    @captainjookie 2 года назад +3

    6:45 He was talking about digital compression, MANY years before it was brought about... Smart guy..!

  • @snowbeard54
    @snowbeard54 16 лет назад +7

    Now there is what I call a brilliant man

  • @Delaypat
    @Delaypat 17 лет назад +4

    I can honestly say I had no idea who invented TV. You learn something new every day! Thanks for the education!!!

  • @myname7056
    @myname7056 Год назад +3

    His wife lived the same time as the TV show Futurama existed, which had Professor Farnsworth on it. I want to know if she ever saw it, and what she thought of it if she did.

  • @arthurharrison1345
    @arthurharrison1345 2 года назад +2

    This video should have 10,000,000,000,000 views and 10,000,000,000,000 thumbs-ups.

    • @driver49
      @driver49  2 года назад +1

      Heh. When I published my book (see link), the log line was "A must read for anybody who watches television." Suffice it to say we've fallen a tad shy of that goal.🤪

  • @driver49
    @driver49  17 лет назад +19

    That's basically true. The quality of television was constrained in the 1940s and 50s due the need to arrive at achievable standards and tet it into the marketplace. By then, Farnsworth had developed a camera tube he called the "Iatron" that was capable of 1000+ lines of resolution. Took another 50+ years to get that in the living room.

  • @playedon78
    @playedon78 3 года назад +6

    I thought John Logie Baird was a legend ....and then i read the book "The last lone inventor" about Farnsworth. Ladies and Gents, this man is one of the greatest inventors and scientists in modern times comparable to Einstein, Edison and others. The story of his struggle and "theft" of his inventions and patents leaves you in wonder at his persistance. A great american. (Coming from an Aussie!)

    • @nouzhabalamoan4743
      @nouzhabalamoan4743 3 месяца назад

      Better than Einstein.. apparently a lot of Einstein's work was actually his wife's work but back then women were in a male dominated industry so it was submitted through him...so yes plagiarists going hard..!

  • @yailenerodriguez856
    @yailenerodriguez856 9 лет назад +7

    im 12 years old and i think they should keep making tv shows like this one i can believe i actually like these shows and i was born in the 21 century

  • @numa28612
    @numa28612 16 лет назад +4

    Thanks for posting this.
    It's a sad truth that most of the greatest minds in physics have been forgotten, even in their own time.

  • @jessicamoulton3511
    @jessicamoulton3511 10 лет назад +60

    I think my great-grandfather is one of the most remarkable and humble men of the 20th century. His humility may be the very reason we don't hear his name around the house. He dreamed to invent, and that's what he did.

    • @UnshallowPodcast
      @UnshallowPodcast 10 лет назад +14

      He definitely was born with a gift and had a vision. HDTV's would probably be about 40 years old by now if he had his way...

    • @mariomaradiaga2039
      @mariomaradiaga2039 9 лет назад +5

      Jessica Moulton Are you family related to Dr. Farnsworth? Wow! cool!

    • @vanshikabhatnagar3739
      @vanshikabhatnagar3739 8 лет назад +3

      He was one of the great men of the 20th century. You should be very proud.

    • @morganfarnsworth3962
      @morganfarnsworth3962 6 лет назад +2

      Jessica Moulton I'm related to Dr.Farnsworth my name is Morgan Farnsworth

    • @thomaspiccirillo6820
      @thomaspiccirillo6820 6 лет назад +4

      JESSICA UR GRANDPA IS THE IDOL OF MY FAMILY SOO UNDERAPPRECIATED MY DAD WAS A VIDEO ENGINEER AT ABC WHO OWED HIS LIVELIHOOD TO MR. F. OUR LIVES REVOLVE AROUND HIS GENIUS MY DAD DIED YOUNG BUT ALWAYS GAVE THE GREAT DR. HIS DUE. THANK YOU AND UR FAMILY PLS TELL UR PARENTS AND GRANDPARENTS TY AND THAT MY DAD WORKED ON THE ORIGINAL DARK SHADOWS

  • @JacobBembry
    @JacobBembry 17 лет назад +3

    Thank you for posting this awesome part of American and world history on RUclips! It's not very often we get to see a blast from the past quite like this! God bless you!

  • @bobkerr2755
    @bobkerr2755 Год назад +2

    66 years later and I'm watching this on a wireless 1440p 5.8 inch screen that fits in my pocket. Just imagine what will be possible 66 years from now.

  • @condensedclassics
    @condensedclassics 16 лет назад +1

    These are the men who made our lives better men who use their minds to create what we take for granted today, those are the people we should remember, admire & honor.

  • @greatestunknown
    @greatestunknown 15 лет назад +3

    I bought in 1997 a VHS video called Big Dream Small Screen (you can Google it) a PBS show about Farnsworth. A great book is The Last Lone Inventor. Thanks for sharing this clip driver-49. I saw part of this years ago on Nicklleodian and I have been hoping to catch it again, watchng Nickleodian over and over. I'm a Broadcast Engineer and Philo fan, and it amazes me how he talks about better use of the 6Mhz bandwidth, flat screens, memory files and 2000 line resolution. Philo is a Phenomenon.

  • @WeylandYutaniCorp91
    @WeylandYutaniCorp91 14 лет назад +26

    That man was a genius, creating a revolutionary invention like the TV, and when he was 14. I tip my hat to you Farnsworth.

    • @mnfowler1
      @mnfowler1 7 лет назад +8

      I love the story about how he came up with the basic idea for transmitting the analog TV signal. He was plowing his uncle's potato field near Rigby, ID, and thinking about one of the biggest problems: if you turn an image into electrons and send them through the air, how do you avoid them ending up just a jumble of electrons? Then he looked behind at the field he had been plowing, working along one row, then turning around and going in the opposite direction to plow the next row. Then it hit him. The answer is simple. You scan the image, turning it into rows of electrons, the end of one row connecting to the end of the next row, right to left, then left to right, until you have turned the whole picture into a number of connected rows of electrons. Now you have a single-file stream of electrons that can be sent and received by a receiver (the TV set), which is programmed to arrange each electron on its screen in the same order it was originally scanned. Fourteen years old. Brilliant!

  • @triggeron
    @triggeron 17 лет назад +4

    I read about Farnsworth and this TV appearance but never actually saw it; thanks for uploading! Most inventors simply recombine what has already been done, using existing technology to make incremental steps, but this guy had to invent an almost entirely new technology from the ground up just like the Wright brothers had to design and build their own engine to get their plane flying. This guy was a true genius.

  • @stephlmt123
    @stephlmt123 11 лет назад +15

    This show was brilliant. To have a surviving eyewitness to the assassination of President Licoln and saw John Wilkes Booth try escape breaking his leg to Philo Farnsworth! I do wonder what Mr. Farnsworth would think of "Real Housewives" however.

    • @mnfowler1
      @mnfowler1 7 лет назад +4

      On the excerpt from "Secret" here he says he thinks TV is positive, but then the host says that in private before the show he hedged about that. I read that privately Farnsworth thought that the content on TV was disappointing and even unwatchable. On the other hand, his widow said that when they were watching the Moon landing together, he turned to her and said, "This makes it all worthwhile."

  • @randomimmigrant348
    @randomimmigrant348 4 года назад +29

    90 percent of the comments here are claiming to be relatives of Farnsworth. Well, he was from Utah where everyone is related to everyone.

  • @noiamhippyman
    @noiamhippyman 4 года назад +14

    The 50's were something else. You win a carton of Winstons and a small wad of cash immediately. lol

    • @krzy_art_snob
      @krzy_art_snob 3 года назад +1

      that was before commies infiltrated !

  • @ramongonzalez2112
    @ramongonzalez2112 Год назад

    Brilliant and humble man. Now HDTV, DVR, and more.👏

  • @saphopoem
    @saphopoem 16 лет назад

    I for one really enjoy your videos. It is a horrible shame they are making you take them down. Tv networks is my FAVORITE channel on you tube. If this channel goes down so does my you tube membership.

  • @morjewmon1
    @morjewmon1 10 лет назад +41

    Interesting man Farnsworth. Also interesting that he was a Mormon and they gave him a carton of Winston cigarettes at the end of the show:)

  • @steeloavenger
    @steeloavenger 16 лет назад +3

    what a FANTASTIC historical find!!! THANK YOU FOR POSTING!!!

  • @cathythewizzard
    @cathythewizzard 17 лет назад +3

    I love you Dr. Farnsworth, thank you for the TV!

  • @LyndaStaiger-gk6uq
    @LyndaStaiger-gk6uq 6 месяцев назад

    I totally loved this clip! Thank you for sharing it with the world.

  • @DrBuzz0
    @DrBuzz0 15 лет назад +2

    You could make a case for either of them. Both made contributions, independently, to the development of electronic television. Tihanyi contributed to a system that was first to be developed commercially, but Farmsworth's system is generally cited as the direct ancestor of modern electronic television using the scan lines and deflection yoke system.
    Vladimir Zworykin has also been called the "father of electronic television."
    It seems they all developed similar ideas independently.

  • @gannetripple
    @gannetripple 12 лет назад +3

    Truth is that few inventions in history have been down to a single person, whether TV, flight, light bulbs or anything else. A number of people are likely to come up with an idea around the same time and work pretty-much in parallel. Then it's down to who perfects it first.

  • @FireBirdSpirit
    @FireBirdSpirit 17 лет назад +6

    I just saw "The Farnsworth Invention" last night on Broadway. Wow! What a show. And what a shame that his credibility was stolen. And now to see this old clip of the real Philo... (loss of words)

  • @Gydinglight12
    @Gydinglight12 14 лет назад +1

    In probably 1960 Gotta Secret had on a very old man who supposedly was the last surviving person who was in Fords' Theatre the night Lincoln was shot. He was maybe 4 years old then and didn't remember much except a lot of commotion. I keep hoping that a video of the Secret episode still exists somewhere.

  • @themangodess
    @themangodess 16 лет назад +2

    Thank you, Farnsworth.. thank you so much

  • @spactick
    @spactick 13 лет назад +1

    @moproducer you got that right. they also stuck it to Armstrong, the fella who invented FM Radio and Short Wave and other things. Armstrong spent years fighting RCA and Sarnoff over patent rights.

  • @genesisrivera9322
    @genesisrivera9322 8 лет назад +2

    i am doing a research project about philo farnsworth and i just found that he invented TV at 14 and thats awesome because he was so young!

  • @msf60khz
    @msf60khz 16 лет назад +1

    Electronic TV using a CRT at the receiver only was proposed by Rosing in Russia in 1907and a system using a CRT for the camera and receiver first proposed on paper by British engineer Campbell-Swinton in 1911. Baird was first to get half tone pictures, 1923, using a mechanical system, and Farnsworth was first with a working electronic camera. First public service was in the UK using Zworykin's camera.

  • @driver49
    @driver49  17 лет назад +5

    That's the only "IGAS" segment I've got... I collect Farno stuff. Thanks for tuning in!

  • @NefariousMAC
    @NefariousMAC 4 года назад +17

    Lol, "Hey thanks for inventing the television and congrats on winning, here's a carton of Winston's, $60, and a firm handshake." Game shows were wild back then.

  • @SiSiHunting
    @SiSiHunting 13 лет назад +7

    I am related to Philo Farnsworth :) hes my Great, Great, Great uncle

  • @pccelu6779
    @pccelu6779 9 лет назад +1

    apenas ahora me entero de quién es el inventor de mi mejor entretenimiento , y me ha conmovido su historia y como este genio y desde ahora ídolo y referente para mí no recibió el mérito , reconocimiento o como se quiera decir , por su aporte a la humanidad , desde hoy triste con esta revelación pero feliz de saber nombrar desde ahora el real y auténtico creador del invento mas divertido de la historia , y desde acá ... hoy ... le envío hasta donde quiera que su alma esté , un abrazo y un pedazo de mi corazón a usted señor Philo ""

  • @TheJPSouza
    @TheJPSouza 6 лет назад +2

    Farnsworth's deep nasal voice is awesome! :)

  • @MrUnidyne
    @MrUnidyne 16 лет назад +6

    The sad and incredibly tragic fact is that this is Dr. Farnsworth's one and only appearance on television...which he invented! And for stumping the panel, he got $80 and a carton of Winston cigarettes!

  • @msymsed
    @msymsed 16 лет назад +1

    What an incredibly interesting man. Thank you for posting this!

  • @metalmoto
    @metalmoto 11 лет назад +1

    Yes, He was a man way ahead of his time.

  • @css1323
    @css1323 4 года назад +10

    Interesting piece of history. On another note, this video was uploaded over 13 years ago, that’s practically ancient!

    • @paulschatzkin9463
      @paulschatzkin9463 4 года назад +2

      I’ve been on the Internet since 1993

    • @driver49
      @driver49  4 года назад +7

      @@williammanning2938 Hello Reddit... did somebody post something on Reddit about this video? Cuz I've gotten more traffic / comments on this post in the past 12 hours or so than I've gotten in the past 12 years... can you post a link for me so I can track the discussion, maybe chime in?

    • @jacobmartin3269
      @jacobmartin3269 4 года назад +1

      @@driver49 www.reddit.com/r/todayilearned/comments/hh3qya/til_that_even_though_philo_farnsworth_the/fw7u9df?context=3

    • @JonathanHam552
      @JonathanHam552 4 года назад +2

      @@driver49 here's the link www.reddit.com/r/todayilearned/comments/hh3qya/til_that_even_though_philo_farnsworth_the/

  • @cshubs
    @cshubs 13 лет назад +1

    I love this clip sooooo much!

  • @itmsjim
    @itmsjim 17 лет назад

    I have many dozens of IGAS episodes and don't have this one! Thanks very much. If you have more and want to trade...lemme know. You're awesome for posting this!

  • @bradgandy02
    @bradgandy02 12 лет назад +3

    He won the $80 and the cigarettes because that was the top prize on I've Got a Secret. They were by no means giving him less money than he deserved. They played by the rules of the show.

  • @Oneslickmick
    @Oneslickmick Год назад +1

    Dude won some ciggys!!

  • @driver49
    @driver49  17 лет назад

    That's the thing that so many people don't understand about Farnsworth: that what came up with was out of "whole cloth." I still get e-mails from people who say John Logie Baird invented television -- talk about recombining things! And of course, the RCA apologists who insist Zworykin was first, despite the lack of any meaningful evidence. But "triggeron" has gotten very much to the heart of the matter. Thanks. --PS

  • @sakka0
    @sakka0 17 лет назад

    That was so cool. Thanks for putting it on RUclips!

  • @ChadQuick270W
    @ChadQuick270W 16 лет назад

    Sadly GSN won't air any episodes sponsored by Winston Cigarettes (which is a hefty portion of this show) so we won't see this episode on there. Thanks for posting this as IGAS was a great panel show along with WML and TTTT.

    • @madc2004
      @madc2004 3 года назад +1

      Why not just censor it? Or show it late at night? Be a lot better than not showing it at all

  • @marcparella
    @marcparella 13 лет назад

    @gannetripple: Farnsworth invented the system that was put into commercial production. It is made clear that Farnsworth invented "all electronic television". The mechanical system was never adopted for commercial or mass production use.

  • @ernesto39100
    @ernesto39100 10 лет назад +1

    philo farnsworth el verdadero pionero de la television moderna y merece todas las congratulaciones....¡¡¡A BAILAR A BAILAR A MOVER LA PELVIS Y GIRAR AL RITMO DE COME GO WITH ME JAJAJAJAJAJAJAJAJA

  • @MrUnidyne
    @MrUnidyne 15 лет назад +2

    Baird's system was mechanical. Farnsworth's system was electronic. Note that he said he invented "electronic television".

  • @OrisLover
    @OrisLover 12 лет назад

    This was a great show!

  • @driver49
    @driver49  17 лет назад +1

    No, that's the only video I know of where he talks about fusion, and that's like 2 years before he even started building a fusor. I think he had the basic idea as early as 1953, though I'd have to check the dates, and he spent like six years checking the math.
    When I first met the Farnsworth family in 1975, they had sd half-inch video of an interview with Farnsworth, never saw that footage, nor do I have any idea what became of the original tape.
    --PS

  • @Bryan514
    @Bryan514 6 лет назад +20

    You can practically hear their eyes glazing over when he starts talking about technical matters. What a bunch of rubes.

    • @gongzo25670
      @gongzo25670 4 года назад +6

      They're not really "computer people" I'm guessing. Get it? Because they're old so they're probably still like that.

    • @Yaoming19981998
      @Yaoming19981998 4 года назад +5

      Hello, from reddit?

    • @scwt89
      @scwt89 4 года назад

      @@Yaoming19981998 le narwhal bacons at midnight

  • @driver49
    @driver49  17 лет назад +3

    "Thnx Driver & NPR"
    NPR? Did NPR say something about Philo Farnsworth today? It is the 80th anniversary of his first successful transmission, maybe they picked up on that?

  • @robertminicksr3450
    @robertminicksr3450 3 месяца назад

    This is my relative.A brilliant DR.

  • @only1egg
    @only1egg 17 лет назад

    Thanks for this Farnsworth clip... most amazing to see the man in person. Do you have any other clips where he talks about his Fusor device?!

  • @keltrina
    @keltrina 17 лет назад

    I just returned from the new play on Broadway - The Farnsworth Invention. What a story. He truly was ripped off by RCA and David Sarnoff. After reading about him on Wiki., it does sound like his life was not as sad and desperate as portrayed in the show. I was glad to read that.

  • @grahampinkerton2091
    @grahampinkerton2091 9 лет назад +2

    No one person invgented Television. It was the result of several engineers Farnswort included. Ferdinand Braun the CRT Kinescope, Manfred von Ardenneg wideband amplifiers Flyingspot Scanners, Paul Nipkov, JL Baird. and last but not least Vladimir Zworykin Who invented the Ikonoscope. Later onTelefunkens Walter Bruch (Pal Color TV.

    • @rivieragrill7282
      @rivieragrill7282 9 лет назад

      +Graham Pinkerton I think it's correct to point out that he specified the facs that he invented ELECTRONIC TELEVISION.

    • @genesisrivera9322
      @genesisrivera9322 8 лет назад

      Graham Pinkerton he did invent TV thats why he is so famous and important in history.

  • @cshubs
    @cshubs 13 лет назад

    Btw, a good way to remember his name is to think of Futurama. The main character is PHIL Frye, and his great nephew is Dr. Farnsworth.

  • @roquesand
    @roquesand 13 лет назад

    @Gydinglight12 i can't put links in the comment box, but it is one of the first suggested videos on the side-bar, uploaded by "GiveMeBlackandWhite"

  • @HAZIDEAD
    @HAZIDEAD 15 лет назад

    Great man.

  • @NHLbrawler
    @NHLbrawler 12 лет назад

    Philo T. Farnsworth -- the Godfather of Television

  • @pippetto888
    @pippetto888 12 лет назад +1

    i love this genius

  • @boxa888
    @boxa888 15 лет назад

    talk about censorship back in the day! people just thought the tv came out of the air! how unfair! this guys contribution is so important to every picture video device in mankind lol!

  • @MerleOberon
    @MerleOberon 17 лет назад +1

    Wow, I want a 2008 FusionGT!

  • @driver49
    @driver49  16 лет назад +5

    Re: Rosing and Campbell-Swinton: neither could make it work. Having the right idea is one thing; having the right idea AND MAKING IT WORK is EVERYTHING.
    Baird didn't even have the right idea.

  • @RocRizzo
    @RocRizzo 6 лет назад +1

    Ask three people, heck, 30 people who invented the TV. I bet not many will know the name Philo T. Farnsworth. Well except for the character on Futurama.

  • @romulusnr
    @romulusnr 13 лет назад +4

    "We're hoping to make television where the display is just the screen." LCD.
    "We're hoping that we can add memory and just paste the picture there." E-Ink.
    "2000 lines instead of 525, in a smaller channel." Well, HDTV is 1080 lines in a much smaller channel. Not quite 2000 yet although they are working on it -- although "they" is the Japanese, not the US, sadly.
    Also, I was surprised he didn't mention color television!

  • @Popgunner101
    @Popgunner101 12 лет назад +1

    His claim is not that he invented the first TV. Mechanical TV was done before his system. His contribution was his electronic "disector" that was the first electronic camera. He only claimed to have invented the first all-electronic TV system.

  • @44032
    @44032 15 лет назад

    As he said, many people had a hand in developing the new medium. Read Wikipedia's article on the "History of Television" for all the details.

  • @jacksblack1
    @jacksblack1 16 лет назад +1

    Tesla was the in the top 2 most important inventors.

  • @cyjo2009
    @cyjo2009 12 лет назад

    He s a relative from my mother's side. My grandfather is the late Herbert E Thomes. I was told it was spelled many ways such as Toms and others, Witch relates me to Marilyn Munroe Madonna the Bush president and Brad Pitt. The connection was made in England between The Bushes and Thomes. This could be 200 plus years ago.

  • @thesoup1989
    @thesoup1989 17 лет назад

    As far as I know, this is Farnsworth's first and only television appearance.

  • @jlbaker2000
    @jlbaker2000 2 года назад

    What did he hand him when he left? It sounded like he said "Here are your Winstons". Please say that isn't so.

    • @driver49
      @driver49  2 года назад

      Sorry, but... that's exactly what he got: "$80 and a carton of Winstons." Quite a windfall, huh?

  • @mnfowler1
    @mnfowler1 7 лет назад +1

    This show creates some mis-impressions. Words imposed on the screen say that Farnsworth invented TV when he was 14 in 1922. Actually, he was 14 in 1920. Also, he came up with diagrams for TV about 1920, but he did not finish building a TV system until September 1927. Even at that, it was another year or two before he put the first person - his wife, Elma - in front of the camera and transmitted her image. In addition, he is called "Dr. X" for purposes of the game show, but Farnsworth did not earn a doctorate degree and he did not receive an honorary doctorate until sometime after this program originally aired.

  • @romulusnr
    @romulusnr 13 лет назад

    @SaveTheCroissants: Well, HDTV is 1080 lines. Though usually its actually only 720...!

  • @romulusnr
    @romulusnr 13 лет назад

    @thebestanthe3rd On the other hand, he spent his time trying to invent even more things, rather than trying to become famous. Some people actually value contribution more than celebrity (which are diametrically opposed).

  • @irishlore
    @irishlore 13 лет назад +5

    Only people like this that actually did something useful should be famous

  • @bailinnumberguy
    @bailinnumberguy 11 лет назад +5

    He's one of the great inventors of all time. His reward? $80 cash and a carton of cigarettes.

    • @lemmymeringue8528
      @lemmymeringue8528 5 лет назад

      Randy Bailin $80 was a lot back then!

    • @mummyjohn
      @mummyjohn 4 года назад

      going to bed knowing you've changed humanity's course irrevocably is probably pretty rewarding

  • @frankroger1551
    @frankroger1551 8 лет назад +2

    not a blessing, a curse

  • @ralphburns6659
    @ralphburns6659 5 лет назад

    You do have to give credit to DeForest for adding that third element to that rectifier tube.

    • @driver49
      @driver49  5 лет назад +1

      And credit Edwin Armstrong for knowing what to do with it

  • @cyclos12
    @cyclos12 14 лет назад +1

    @lungbrown yes the man was a genius!

  • @jsl151850b
    @jsl151850b 17 лет назад

    What happened to his fusion research?
    (If any?)

  • @Onlymusical
    @Onlymusical 13 лет назад

    America's greatest inventor.

  • @MrUnidyne
    @MrUnidyne 16 лет назад

    Baird's system was only 15 lines on a vertical bias. Farnsworth's was (I believe) originaly 425 horizontal lines. There simply is no comparison.

  • @ARBB1
    @ARBB1 3 года назад

    Nice.

  • @funnyusername8635
    @funnyusername8635 4 года назад

    Where can I see a mechanical television?

    • @driver49
      @driver49  4 года назад

      Try this: mztv.com