John Logie Baird: Difference between revisions

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==Legacy==
==Legacy==
TV now spans the globe and is the world's most popular form of entertainment, offering multiple channels covering all sorts of subjects.  Television standards and technologies have now advanced in many ways, but Logie's vision remains.  According to Ian Logie Baird, the inventor's grandson and curator of television at the National Media Museum in Bradford, "Even in the days of early television he envisaged a world with more than one channel, with two or three or four different channels. And he was also looking at the multi-channel thing going on with radio as well, so he was very in favour of choice for viewers and even different standards as well."<ref name="BBC">BBC News.  Contest to find oldest television. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/scotland/glasgow_and_west/7650197.stm</ref>
Television is now found in every corner of the globe and numbers among the world's most popular pastimes, offering multiple channels covering an enormous variety of subjects.  Television standards and technologies have advanced in many ways, but much of Logie's vision remains.  According to Ian Logie Baird, the inventor's grandson and curator of television at the National Media Museum in Bradford, "Even in the days of early television he envisaged a world with more than one channel, with two or three or four different channels. And he was also looking at the multi-channel thing going on with radio as well, so he was very in favour of choice for viewers and even different standards as well."<ref name="BBC">BBC News.  Contest to find oldest television. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/scotland/glasgow_and_west/7650197.stm</ref>


With the switch to digital television, Ian Logie Baird and UK Digital launched a contest to find the oldest television in Scotland so that it could be converted to digital.  "Ideally it would be something as old as 1936 when the first electronic TVs came onto the market,"<ref name="BBC" /> Logie said, demonstrating the continuing relevance of his grandfather's work.
With the switch to digital television, Ian Logie Baird and UK Digital launched a contest to find the oldest television in Scotland so that it could be converted to digital.  "Ideally it would be something as old as 1936 when the first electronic TVs came onto the market,"<ref name="BBC" /> Logie said, demonstrating the continuing relevance of his grandfather's work.

Revision as of 11:04, 12 February 2009

Legacy

Television is now found in every corner of the globe and numbers among the world's most popular pastimes, offering multiple channels covering an enormous variety of subjects. Television standards and technologies have advanced in many ways, but much of Logie's vision remains. According to Ian Logie Baird, the inventor's grandson and curator of television at the National Media Museum in Bradford, "Even in the days of early television he envisaged a world with more than one channel, with two or three or four different channels. And he was also looking at the multi-channel thing going on with radio as well, so he was very in favour of choice for viewers and even different standards as well."[1]

With the switch to digital television, Ian Logie Baird and UK Digital launched a contest to find the oldest television in Scotland so that it could be converted to digital. "Ideally it would be something as old as 1936 when the first electronic TVs came onto the market,"[1] Logie said, demonstrating the continuing relevance of his grandfather's work.

  1. 1.0 1.1 BBC News. Contest to find oldest television. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/scotland/glasgow_and_west/7650197.stm