TELEVISION INVENTOR.
♦_ —,_. NO RIVAL OF RADIO SYDNEY, April 1. The "father of television," as Mr John Logie Baird has been called, arrived in Sydney to attend the World Radio Convention. One of Mr Baud's first declarations was to define television's place in relation to broadcasting. "Television,'' he said, "is a thing apart from present radio broadcasting, with which it is not a competitor. They are essentially two different things. They require altogether different kinds of transmission and reception apparatus. The public, therefore, should give no credence to any suggestions that television will render obsolete existing broadcast radio receivers. Nor will it compete with radio broadcast reception in the future. It must be regarded as supplementary and not as an alternative or a rival." Rapid Development in England Nevertheless, Mr Baird added, it would be incorrect to assume that television had not reached a stage of public acceptance. When the Coronation was successfully televised in May last year there were only about 500 televisors in use in London; at the end of December there were approximately 9000 That was rapid development, but it
should be noted that there were 2,000,000 broadcast receiving licences in London. In that great metropolis, television receivers were being sold at from £3B up, although a good televisor giving pictures 12in. by lOin. cost about £6O to £7O. The British Broadcasting Corporation gave two television sessions a day—one in the afternoon and one at night. Actually Spanned the Atlantic Mr Baird said that at the present stage of the process television was a commercial proposition only in large centres of population. London was the only city in which the regular television services were relayed. Notwithstanding that he had actually "spanned” the Atlantic, he agreed that as yet the system was limited for practical purposes to a range of about 30 or 40 miles. [ The marvels of the invention he has pioneered are almost the last things that Mr Baird can be induced to talk about. He speaks in a soft and diffiIdent voice, and confines himself, whereever possible, to monosyllables when he is answering questions, but with no suggestion of curtness. He made it clear that his sole intention was to read a'scientific paper before the Institute of Radio Engineers.
Permanent link to this item
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/HC19380512.2.15
Bibliographic details
Horowhenua Chronicle, 12 May 1938, Page 3
Word Count
373TELEVISION INVENTOR. Horowhenua Chronicle, 12 May 1938, Page 3
Using This Item
NZME is the copyright owner for the Horowhenua Chronicle. You can reproduce in-copyright material from this newspaper for non-commercial use under a Creative Commons New Zealand BY-NC-SA licence . This newspaper is not available for commercial use without the consent of NZME. For advice on reproduction of out-of-copyright material from this newspaper, please refer to the Copyright guide.