Director of Sarnoff Library authors television history book
Aug 3, 2007 12:46 PM
“The Life Story of a Technology” by David Sarnoff Library director Alexander Magoun covers the history of television from 19th-century European conceptual systems to DTV.
With the help of Greenwood Publishing, David Sarnoff Library director Alexander Magoun has published “Television: The Life Story of a Technology,” a volume in the Greenwood Technographies series that covers the history of television from 19th-century European conceptions of transmitting moving images electrically to the death of TV as a discrete system in the digital age. Magoun also discusses the changing face of television in the displays that people watch worldwide. The book highlights key events and people: the American engineers and entrepreneurs such as Vladimir Zworykin and David Sarnoff who ignited the television industry; the boom of programming choices in tandem with the Baby Boom Generation; the development of cable and satellite TV; the Asians who innovated American inventions in video recording and flat-panel displays; the use of TV in wartime; and the new worlds of digital video and HDTV.
The book is available at www.amazon.com.
For more information, visit www.davidsarnoff.org.
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