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Evolution of Media, The Electronic Age(1940)
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The device that…
Evolution of Media
Industrial Age (1700-193) This era started the Shift from agricultural and handicraft economy to the one that is dominated by machines and machine manufacture.
Typewriter (1800) A type writer is a mechanical or electromechanical machine for writing characters similar to those produces by printer's movable type.
Motion Pictures Photography/Projection (1890)
Damoizeau built what has been suggested as the first panoramic camera, which is untrue.
Commercial Motion Pictures (1913)
Motion pictures, movie-making as an art and an industry, including its production techniques, its creative artists, and the distribution and exhibition of its products (see also motion picture photography;Motion Picture Cameras under camera).
TELEPHONE (1844) Before the development of the electric telephone, the term “telephone” was applied to other inventions, and not all early researchers of the electrical device called it “telephone”.
Motion Pictures w/ Sound (1926
A sound film is a motion picture with synchronized sound, or sound technologically coupled to image, as opposed to a silent film.
Telegraph
is the long-distance transmission of textual or symbolic (as opposed to verbal or audio) messages without the physical exchange of an object bearing the message.
The Electronic Age(1940)
The device that gave birth to an electronic age, rooted in this new physics, became known (at least in the U.S.) as the vacuum tube. Conventionally, two men figure in the story of its creation: the Englishman Ambrose Fleming, and the American Lee de Forest.
The Wireless
We now skip forward twenty years, to 1904. At this time, In England, a man named John Ambrose Fleming was working on behalf of the Marconi Company to develop a better receiver for radio waves.
Valve
In 1904 Fleming was a professor of electrical engineering at University College, London, but also a consultant for the Marconi Company.
Prologue: Edison
Edison is, in the popular imagination, the inventor of the electric light bulb. This gives him both too much credit and too little. Too much credit, again, because Edison was not the only one to devise an incandescent bulb. In additional to a variety of pre-commercial predecessors, Joseph Swan and Charles Stearn in the U.K. and fellow American William Sawyer brought lamps to market around the same time as Edison.
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Audion
Lee de Forest had an unusual upbringing for a Yale man. His father, the Reverend Henry de Forest, was a Civil War veteran from New York, a Congregationalist pastor, and a fervent believer in his mission as a man of God to spread the light of knowledge and justice. As such, he dutifully took up the call when invited to the presidency of Talladega College in Alabama.
The Telephone, Again
The long-distance network was the central nervous sytem of AT&T. Tying together its many local operating companies, it provided a crucial competitive advantage after the expiration of the core Bell patents.
Information Age: (1970) The Information Age is a historical period that began in the mid-20th century, characterized by a rapid epochal shift from the traditional industry established by the Industrial Revolution to an economy primarily based upon information technology.
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Smart Phones (1992) It was first called "Simon personal Communicator" and it was created by IBM. The tech company IBM is widely credited with developing the world's first smartphone – the bulky but rather cutely named Simon.
Blog (1997) a regularly updated website or web page, typically one run by an individual or small group, that is written in an informal or conversational style.
Web Browser (1990) It is a software application for accessing on the word Wide Web and and introduced to his colleagues at CERN in March 1991.
Portable Computer (1983) It is a personal computer that is designed to be easily transported and relocated.
Social Network (1990) The earliest forms of the Internet, such as CompuServe, were developed in the 1960s. Internet relay chats, or IRCs, were first used in 1988 and continued to be popular well into the 1990's.
Pre-Historic Age (before 1700) During this age the medium of communication was through language primarily
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Dibao in China (2nd Century) Dibao literally "reports from the residences", were a type of publications issued by central and local governments in imperial China.
Clay tablet (2400 BC) A clay tablet is a more or less flat surface made of clay. Using a stylus, symbols were pressed into the soft clay.
Cave paintings (35,000 B.C.) Cave or rock paintings are paintings painted on cave or rock walls and ceilings, usually dating to prehistoric times.
Maya codices (5th Century) are folding books written by the pre-Columbian Maya civilization in Maya hieroglyphic script on Mesoamerican bark paper.
The Acta Diurna (130 BC) the First Daily Gazette, is Presented on Message Boards in Public Places.
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Group Members: Gemar Canin, Jhon Vincent Gentapa, Arthur Bajala)
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