Neil Alden Armstrong


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1933 FM radio Edwin Howard Armstrong develops frequency modulation, or FM, radio as a solution to the static interference problem that plagues AM radio transmission, especially in summer when electrical storms are prevalent. Rather than increasing the strength or amplitude of his radio waves, Armstrong changes only the frequency on which they are transmitted. However, it will be several years before FM receivers come on the market.

  • 1947 Transistor is invented The future of radio and television is forever changed when John Bardeen, Walter Brattain, and William Shockley of Bell Laboratories co-invent the transistor.

  • 1950s Cathode-ray tube (CRT) for television monitors improved Engineers improve the rectangular cathode-ray tube (CRT) for television monitors, eliminating the need for rectangular "masks" over the round picture tubes of earlier monitors. The average price of a television set drops from $500 to $200.



  • 1953 RCA’s new system for commercial color adopted RCA beats out rival CBS when the National Television System Committee adopts RCA’s new system for commercial color TV broadcasting. CBS has pioneered color telecasting, but its system is incompatible with existing black-and-white TV monitors throughout the country.

    • 1953 RCA’s new system for commercial color adopted RCA beats out rival CBS when the National Television System Committee adopts RCA’s new system for commercial color TV broadcasting. CBS has pioneered color telecasting, but its system is incompatible with existing black-and-white TV monitors throughout the country.

    • 1954 First coast-to-coast color television transmission The New Year’s Day Tournament of Roses in Pasadena, California, becomes the first coast-to-coast color television transmission, or "colorcast." The parade is broadcast by RCA’s NBC network to 21 specially equipped stations and is viewed on newly designed 12-inch RCA Victor receivers set up in selected public venues. Six weeks later NBC’s Camel News Caravan transmits in color, and the following summer the network launches its first color sitcom, The Marriage, starring Hume Cronyn and Jessica Tandy.

    • 1954 First all-transistor radio Regency Electronics introduces the TR-1, the first all-transistor radio. It operates on a 22-volt battery and works as soon as it is switched on, unlike tube radios, which take several minutes to warm up. The TR-1 sells for $49.95; is available in six colors, including mandarin red, cloud gray and olive green; and is no larger than a package of cigarettes.

    • 1958 Integrated circuit Jack S. Kilby of Texas Instruments and Robert Noyce of Fairchild Semiconductor, working independently, create the integrated circuit, a composite semiconductor block in which transistor, resistor, condenser, and other electrical components are manufactured together as one unit. Initially, the revolutionary invention is seen primarily as an advancement for radio and television, which together were then the nation’s largest electronics industry.



    1962 Telstar 1 Communications satellite Telstar 1 is launched by a NASA Delta rocket on July 10, transmitting the first live transatlantic telecast as well as telephone and data signals. At a cost of $6 million provided by AT&T, Bell Telephone Laboratories designs and builds Telstar, a faceted sphere 34 inches in diameter and weighing 171 pounds. The first international television broadcasts shows images of the American flag flying over Andover, Maine to the sound of "The Star-Spangled Banner." Later that day AT&T chairman Fred Kappel makes the first long-distance telephone call via satellite to Vice President Lyndon Johnson. Telstar I remains in orbit for seven months, relaying live baseball games, images from the Seattle World's Fair, and a presidential news conference.

    • 1962 Telstar 1 Communications satellite Telstar 1 is launched by a NASA Delta rocket on July 10, transmitting the first live transatlantic telecast as well as telephone and data signals. At a cost of $6 million provided by AT&T, Bell Telephone Laboratories designs and builds Telstar, a faceted sphere 34 inches in diameter and weighing 171 pounds. The first international television broadcasts shows images of the American flag flying over Andover, Maine to the sound of "The Star-Spangled Banner." Later that day AT&T chairman Fred Kappel makes the first long-distance telephone call via satellite to Vice President Lyndon Johnson. Telstar I remains in orbit for seven months, relaying live baseball games, images from the Seattle World's Fair, and a presidential news conference.

    • 1968 200 million television sets There are 200 million television sets in operation worldwide, up from 100 million in 1960. By 1979 the number reaches 300 million and by 1996 over a billion. In the United States the number grows from 1 million in 1948 to 78 million in 1968. In 1950 only 9 percent of American homes have a TV set; in 1962, 90 percent; and in 1978, 98 percent, with 78 percent owning a color TV.

    • 1988 Sony "Watchman" Sony introduces the first in its "Watchman" series of handheld, battery-operated, transistorized television sets. Model FD-210, with its 1.75-inch screen, is the latest entry in a 30-year competition among manufacturers to produce tiny micro-televisions. The first transistorized TV, Philco’s 1959 Safari, stood 15 inches high and weighed 15 pounds.

    • 1990 FCC sets a testing schedule for proposed all-digital HDTV system Following a demonstration by Phillips two years earlier of a high-definition TV (HDTV) system for satellite transmission, the Federal Communications Commission sets a testing schedule for a proposed all-digital HDTV system. Tests begin the next year, and in 1996 Zenith introduces the first HDTV-compatible front-projection television. Also in 1996, broadcasters, TV manufacturers, and PC makers set inter-industry standards for digital HDTV. By the end of the century, digital HDTV, which produces better picture and sound than analog television and can transmit more data faster, is on the verge of offering completely interactive TV.




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