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Scottish engineer and inventor John Logie Baird has gone down in history as a pioneer of television, who in 1926 became the first to demonstrate the televising of moving objects. Written by Nick Smith ...
Walk around Soho and Covent Garden and one name pops up time and time again. John Logie Baird, Scottish-born inventor of television, seems to have broadcast his achievements to half the streets in ...
When Daniel Fosbery moved his lighting business into 26 Guildhall Street in Folkestone two years ago, one of the first things he did was rip up the cladding lining the walls left behind by the ...
Joey Essex was raised by television, his mother a camera, his father a boom microphone, the midwife John Logie Baird himself. He was left at the doorstep of a production company in a basket ...
The grandson of John Logie Baird visited Helensburgh last week, as preparations to mark 100 years of the television were stepped up. Iain Logie Baird, who was brought up in Canada but now lives in ...
Ten years earlier, Scottish inventor John Logie Baird had transmitted the still color image of a basket of strawberries, according to the UK’s Science and Media Museum. And in 1926, the Daily ...
Lynn got in touch with us and we arranged for Iain Logie Baird, grandson of the inventor of television, John Logie Baird, to visit her home in Bankfield Drive, Nab Wood, to see where live sound ...
While the Toymaker is fictional, the episode’s story about a dummy named Stooky Bill, the first TV image, and John Logie Baird are real. How Does Doctor Who Tie the Toymaker Into Stooky Bill ...
On July 3, 1928, the Scottish inventor John Logie Baird accomplished a monumental feat by demonstrating the world's first colour transmission. This groundbreaking achievement revolutionised the ...
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