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5 5 th th Information Information Revolution: Revolution: The Toolshed The Toolshed Home Home CA201 - 8
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5th Information Revolution: The Toolshed Home

Jan 22, 2016

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Faye Martel

Discusses how developments in communication technologies are changing the society.
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Page 1: 5th Information Revolution: The Toolshed Home

55thth Information Revolution: Information Revolution:

The Toolshed HomeThe Toolshed Home

CA201 - 8

Page 2: 5th Information Revolution: The Toolshed Home

The Toolshed Home

• Coming of electricity

• Communication without transportation

• Radio, phonograph, newspaper & magazines – were all enjoyed at home

Page 3: 5th Information Revolution: The Toolshed Home

The Great DepressionThe Great Depression

• Mass unemployment

• Bread lines, soup kitchens

• Families evicted from homes

• They wanted FREE entertainment

Page 4: 5th Information Revolution: The Toolshed Home

““Free” EntertainmentFree” Entertainment

• Free radio entertainment was all that many people can afford

• “the Golden Age of Radio”

• Radio was much more personal

Page 5: 5th Information Revolution: The Toolshed Home

The Power of RadioThe Power of Radio

• October 30, 1938• Orson Welles’ Mercury

Theater• HG Well’s War of the

Worlds• Demonstrated the

emotional power of media• Hypodermic Needle

Effect

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Page 6: 5th Information Revolution: The Toolshed Home

Television Technology: BeginningsTelevision Technology: Beginnings

• “seeing at a distance”

• Scientific American June 1907

• Visual wireless, visual radio, electric vision

Page 7: 5th Information Revolution: The Toolshed Home

Television Technology: BeginningsTelevision Technology: Beginnings

1884Paul Gottlieb Nipkow

“Nipkow Disk”1st major technological discovery to suggest

that pictures could travel

Page 8: 5th Information Revolution: The Toolshed Home

Television Technology: BeginningsTelevision Technology: Beginnings

1923Vladimir Zworykin

Developed an all-electronic system to transform a visual

image into an electrical signalthat could travel through air.

Page 9: 5th Information Revolution: The Toolshed Home

Television Technology: BeginningsTelevision Technology: Beginnings1930

Philo FarnsworthImproved Nipkow’s

Mechanical scanning device:Cathode ray, reproduces

electronic images more clearly.

Page 10: 5th Information Revolution: The Toolshed Home

Television Technology: BeginningsTelevision Technology: Beginnings

April 30, 1939NBC’s Commercial TV debut

1939 World’s Fair, NYPres. Franklin Roosevelt –

1st president to appear on TV

Page 11: 5th Information Revolution: The Toolshed Home

Early Television ProgrammingEarly Television Programming

• Like radio with pictures: variety shows, sitcoms, drama, Westerns, detective stories, soap operas and quiz shows

Page 12: 5th Information Revolution: The Toolshed Home

Rise of Television NewsRise of Television News

November 22, 1963Assassination of JFK

More than 9 out 10 American watched the coverage

1968Anti-War Demonstrations and Vietnam War

Page 13: 5th Information Revolution: The Toolshed Home

Radio in the TV EraRadio in the TV Era

1936Edwin Armstrong

introduces FM(frequency modulation)

radio

1935Martin Block

1st DJLicensed recordingslaunch disc jockeys

Gordon McLendonIntroduced format

radio-Standardized

-programs

Page 14: 5th Information Revolution: The Toolshed Home

Portable RadiosPortable Radios

1928William LearCar Radio

“drive-time audiences”6-9 am; 4-7pm

Gerald Bartell 1957

Page 15: 5th Information Revolution: The Toolshed Home

Radio’s New RoleRadio’s New Role

• Once the leisure-time “reward”

• Now accompanies almost every type of activity

• Radio as companion• Radio survived

because it adapted to fill a different need for its audience

Page 16: 5th Information Revolution: The Toolshed Home

Wiring the Toolshed: CATVWiring the Toolshed: CATV

• CATV – Community Antenna Television

• 1948 • John Walson • Demonstrated TV using

army surplus twin-lead cable

• Jerrold Electronics – designed the system

Page 17: 5th Information Revolution: The Toolshed Home

Wiring the Toolshed: CATVWiring the Toolshed: CATV

• Early CATV systems received broadcast television signals off the air and distributed the over coaxial cable to subscribers’ television

• These systems did not originate programming

Page 18: 5th Information Revolution: The Toolshed Home

Originating ProgrammingOriginating Programming

• 1951• Martin Malarkey• Pottsville,

Pennsylvania• Responsible for

local origination with his 30 min local program

• CATV was now “cable tv”

Page 19: 5th Information Revolution: The Toolshed Home

Trying to Record TelevisionTrying to Record Television

John Logie BairdThe first to produce

moving television images.

Tried to record a picture signal on

phonograph records.

Lee de ForestBuilt an

apparatus that included a revolving wheel and needles that etched a moving

film coated with silver.

RVL Harley and HE Ivesdevised the kinescope.

x x

Page 20: 5th Information Revolution: The Toolshed Home

The First Videotape MachinesThe First Videotape Machines• 1956• Ampex succeeded in

devising a video recorder

• 3M worked with Ampex to make high quality recording tape

• 1958 – networks were recording in color

• 1971 – Sony introduced the Umatic ¾ cassette tape recorder

Page 21: 5th Information Revolution: The Toolshed Home

Home VideosHome VideosPeople do not have to read a

book when its delivered. Why should they have to

see a TV program when it is delivered?

Akio MoritaSONY President

1975SONY introduced the

Betamax.

1976JVC introduced theVHS (video home

system).

Page 22: 5th Information Revolution: The Toolshed Home

Cellular Phones

• A long-rage, portable electronic device used for mobile communication

• 1945 – 0G phones were introduced

• 1970 – Amos Joel of Bell Labs invented the “call-handoff” feature

• Martin Cooper of Motorola – inventor of the first practical mobile phone

• Mid-1980s – 1G phones were launched – 1st fully automatic mobile phone system

Page 23: 5th Information Revolution: The Toolshed Home

To SummarizeTo Summarize

• NEED– Free entertainment, information by

demand• MEANS

– Radio, phonograph, telephone• SOLUTION

– Television, new radio formats, cable TV, VCRs, fiber optics, cellular phones

• EFFECT– Old media adapting to old media, time

shifting, heavy media usage, contacts decreasing