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TELEVISION.

PICTURES BY WIRELESS. A DREAM OF THE FUTURE. <Revived 21. 10.8 a.m.) London, Dec. 20. The ‘Weekly Dispatch’s'' Paris correspondent says that the Mr Edouard Berlin gave a demonstration of his television invention, in which he uses a photo-telegraphic tuning mirror. Professor Low. who patented the television apparatus during the war period, explains that the principle of television consists of dividing a picture into ‘'-mall nquares which arttransmitted at a speed enabling a second impression of the whole picture to begin before the first has faded from the eye. This at present is impossible, because wireless is insufficiently selective to enable the use of different wave lengths, which is essentiasl to success. When selective wireless permits simultaneous transmission of the whole picture, eliminating the tuning mirror, the problem will be solved. That is unlikely for at least a decade—(Sydney “Sun” cable).

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/HBTRIB19251221.2.55

Bibliographic details

Hawke's Bay Tribune, Volume XVI, Issue 8, 21 December 1925, Page 6

Word Count
142

TELEVISION. Hawke's Bay Tribune, Volume XVI, Issue 8, 21 December 1925, Page 6

TELEVISION. Hawke's Bay Tribune, Volume XVI, Issue 8, 21 December 1925, Page 6