Article in the San Francisco Chronicle dated September 3, 1928 about Farnsworth's functional tv system
Article in the San Francisco Chronicle dated September 3, 1928 about Farnsworth's functional tv system
"The first television sets needed constant adjustment and the tiny cathode ray tubes glowed blurry, greenish-gray images. This 1930s Farnsworth television and camera, recreated by Richard Gro
"The first television sets needed constant adjustment and the tiny cathode ray tubes glowed blurry, greenish-gray images. This 1930s Farnsworth television and camera, recreated by Richard Grosser, reveals how much “do-it-yourself” was required"(thehistoryoftv.com).
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A: San Francisco, California, United States

Philo Farnsworth Invents the First All-Electronic Television

9/7/1927
photo of Farnsworth's first working tv camera tube, the "image dissector" (1927)
Farnsworth's first working tv camera tube, the "image dissector" (1927)

On September 7, 1927 American inventor Philo T. Farnsworth transmitted an image through the first fully functional all-electronic image pickup device (video camera tube), the image dissector.

 Farnsworth also invented the first fully functional and complete all-electronic television television system.

"When Philo T. Farnsworth was 13, he envisioned a contraption that would receive an image transmitted from a remote location—the television. Farnsworth submitted a patent in January 1927, when he was 19, and began building and testing his invention that summer. He used an "image dissector" (the first television camera tube) to convert the image into a current, and an "image oscillite" (picture tube) to receive it. On this day his tests bore fruit. When the simple image of a straight line was placed between the image dissector and a carbon arc lamp, it showed up clearly on the receiver in another room. His first tele-electronic image was transmitted on a glass slide in his S[an] F[rancisco] lab at 202 Green St" (http://www.timelines.ws/subjects/Television.HTML, accessed 12-22-2009).

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