In his lab 100 years ago, inventor John Logie Baird delivered the first public demonstration of true television. What exactly did viewers see that day?
Exactly one century on, a team at Bournemouth University is recreating the first receiver.
The breakthrough is often credited to Scottish inventor John Logie Baird—but the real history is far more complicated and ...
In Soho, London, 100 years ago, John Logie Baird’s mechanical television system broadcast recognisable human faces for the ...
One hundred years after the birth of television in Britain, Magic Rays of Light author John Wyver looks back at the rapid development of the new medium during the 1930s – a lost era that saw a huge ...
On a cold Tuesday in London in 1926, a tallish but sickly and eccentric Scotsman invited members of Britain’s Royal ...
To mark 100 years since the first public demonstration of television, RTS Technology Centre's Kara Myhill reflects on how the medium has transformed from a technological marvel into something that's ...
Discover how John Logie Baird’s invention brought BBC television to St Helens in 1949, with Sutton Coldfield transmissions and early TV sets ...
Scottish inventor John Logie Baird revealed the first television, called the Televisor, to the world. Those first pictures, flickering images of the head of a ventriloquist's doll, sparked a ...
THIS year marks the 100th anniversary of the first public demonstration of television, and we’re looking back at the medium that’s meant so much to us.
The moon landing! Royal weddings! Janet Jackson’s $550,000 nipple! As television turns 100, we charts its journey from terrifyingly dangerous to the thing that unites us ...
After British television was established in 1926, it went on to foster a productively rich relationship with the arts, but coverage has seriously declined this century.
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