Television history broadcasting expanded rapidly after World War II, becoming an important mass medium for advertising, propaganda, and entertainment.
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Television history broadcasting expanded rapidly after World War II, becoming an important mass medium for advertising, propaganda, and entertainment.
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Television history broadcasting is supported by continuing technical developments such as long-haul microwave networks, which allow distribution of programming over a wide geographic area.
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Television history created his first prototypes in Hastings, where he was recovering from a serious illness.
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Television history began with a frame-rate of five per second, which was increased to a rate of 12.
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Television history published an article on "Motion Pictures by Wireless" in 1913, but it was not until December 1923 that he transmitted moving silhouette images for witnesses.
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Television history knew that objects seen in peripheral vision don't need to be as sharp as those in the center.
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Television history's solution was a camera tube that accumulated and stored electrical charges within the tube throughout each scanning cycle.
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Television history demonstrated the same system using monochrome signals to produce a 3D image.
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Television history service expanded in the following years as new studios were built in Ostrava, Bratislava, Brno and Kosice.
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Television history broadcasting in Japan started on August 28,1953, making the country one of the first in the world with an experimental television service.
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One of Telesistema Mexicano's earliest broadcasts as a network, over XEW-TV, on June 25,1955, was the first international North American broadcast in the medium's Television history, and was jointly aired with NBC in the United States, where it aired as the premiere episode of Wide Wide World, and the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation.
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Television history set, called a television receiver, television, TV set, TV, or telly, is a device that combines a tuner, display, and speakers for the purpose of viewing television.
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