Philo Farnsworth Research Paper

Words: 773
Pages: 4

Only fourteen at the time, Philo Farnsworth invented the world’s first all-electronic television. By the time of his death, he earned over 300 U.S. and foreign patents for electronic and mechanical devices.
The television transmits moving images in black and white, or in color, and in two or three dimensions and sound. It is used all around the world for marketing, entertainment, and many more other things. The television helped connect people and allowed communication to reach all around the world since it was very uninformed before. It allowed people to be informed. The television was invented in the year 1930 by a fourteen year old named Philo Farnsworth. Philo Farnsworth was born on August 19th in the year 1906. This young farm boy would
…show more content…
On July 20, 1969, he watched American astronauts walk on the moon. The astronauts sent back sharp, clear pictures. The pictures traveled 238,900 miles from the moon using a very small version of Philo’s image dissector. Once Philo saw astronauts walking on the moon on tv, he knew his invention had been worth all the work. Not only did Farnsworth invent television but the invention led to many other inventions; DVDs, VCRs, cable television, satellite television, TV dinners, television shows, etc. He also invented television scanning, syncing, contrast control, cathode ray tube, and many more. With all of these inventions impacting the world, he was granted patents. A patent says many things about the inventor; the ideas are workable, the ideas are new, and if people want to use the ideas, they have to pay money, called a royalty, to the owner of the patent. At the same time, RCA began aggressively competing with Farnsworth for control of the emerging television market and challenged the patent of his invention. With the testimony of Farnsworth’s high school teacher, Justin Tollman, it was determined that Farnsworth had indeed documented his ideas one year before RCA’s Vladimir Zworykin. This was the first of many challenges from RCA, but in the end the corporate giant was forced to work out a cross-licensing arrangement with