Q. Who Invented Television?
Philo Farnsworth invented television.
Philo Farnsworth, full name Philo Taylor Farnsworth II, was an American inventor who invented the first all-electronic television network. He was born August 19, 1906, in Beaver, Utah, and died March 11, 1971, in Salt Lake City, Utah.
From a young age, Farnsworth was a technological prodigy. As a youth, he was a voracious reader of science journals and became fascinated by the subject of television, believing that mechanical solutions such as a rotating object would be too slow to detect and reassemble images many times per second.
Only an electrical system could scan and construct an image quickly enough, and he had figured out the fundamentals of electronic television by 1922.
Television’s Forefather:
John Logie Baird, known as the “Father of Television” and the “Pioneer of Television,” was a Scottish inventor. He was born in Scotland on August 13, 1888, and died in England on June 14, 1946.
He was a professional engineer. He graduated from the University of Glasgow with a certificate and a master’s degree in electrical engineering. Baird is most recognised for inventing the mechanical television system.
In the 1920s, he was the first one to display a functional television, and he was granted a patent for his research with a glass rod that enabled images to be sent on the television.