Television Comes to the Home Radio News, April 1928. Volume 9 Number 10. Published by Experimenter Publishing, New York, NY Editor-in-Chief and Publisher: Hugo Gernsback Image:Radio News Apr 1928 pg1098.png I More
How to Make Your Own Television Receiver. Experimenter Publishing's WRNY began transmitting experimental television in August 1928 to viewers in New York City. Most viewers built their own set. Radio News, Nove More
Radio News, October 1928. Volume 10 Number 4. Published by Experimenter Publishing, New York, NY Editor-in-Chief and Publisher: Hugo Gernsback The page numbers were on an annual basis, not per issue. This iss More
The television image would be viewed through the cone. The image was 1.5 inches square (4 by 4 cm) and had 48 scan lines at 7.5 frames per second. (This was a low definition "48p" display.) The man is using a 1 More
Science & Invention, November 1928. Volume 16 Number 7. Hugo Gernsback Editor-in-Chief. Cover Art by R. E. Pattiani. Published by Experimenter Publishing Company. New York, NY. The page numbers were on an ann More
How to build the S&I Television Receiver Science and Invention, November 1928. Volume 16 Number 7. Published by Experimenter Publishing. New York, NY. Editor-in-Chief and Publisher: Hugo Gernsback Image:Scien More
The Scanning Disc, Television's Canvas Cropped from page 222 Image:Radio News Sep 1928 pg222.png Radio News, September 1928. Volume 10 Number 3. Published by Experimenter Publishing, New York, NY Editor-in-Ch More
How to Make Your Own Television Receiver. Experimenter Publishing's WRNY began transmitting experimental television in August 1928 to viewers in New York City. Most viewers built their own set. Schematic croppe More
Photographed at the National Museum of Scotland, Edinburgh.