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Electromechanical Inventors

The document highlights key electromechanical inventors and their contributions to technology, including Guglielmo Marconi's wireless telegraph, Samuel Morse's telegraph and Morse code, and Thomas Edison's inventions like the electric light bulb. It also discusses the development of the first electronic digital computer by John Vincent Atanasoff and Clifford Berry, as well as Philo Farnsworth's work on television technology and Alexander Graham Bell's invention of the telephone. Additionally, it mentions Martin Cooper's role in mobile phone development, Presper Eckert and John Mauchly's ENIAC computer, and Ray Tomlinson's pioneering work in email.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
5 views4 pages

Electromechanical Inventors

The document highlights key electromechanical inventors and their contributions to technology, including Guglielmo Marconi's wireless telegraph, Samuel Morse's telegraph and Morse code, and Thomas Edison's inventions like the electric light bulb. It also discusses the development of the first electronic digital computer by John Vincent Atanasoff and Clifford Berry, as well as Philo Farnsworth's work on television technology and Alexander Graham Bell's invention of the telephone. Additionally, it mentions Martin Cooper's role in mobile phone development, Presper Eckert and John Mauchly's ENIAC computer, and Ray Tomlinson's pioneering work in email.

Uploaded by

bellnacion05
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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ELECTROMECHANICAL INVENTORS

GUILIELMO MARCONI
The first workable wireless telegraph was
SAMUEL MORCE created by Italian engineer and inventor
The Morse code, a method of encoding text Guglielmo Marconi, who transformed long-
as a sequence of on-off tones, clicks, or light distance communication. For his innovative
flashes, was created by American inventor work, he received the Nobel Prize in Physics
and artist Samuel Morse. In addition, he in 1909.
created the telegraph, which transformed
long-distance correspondence. In addition
to being a brilliant artist and inventor,
Morse is still acknowledged today for his
contributions to communication
technology.

THOMAS EDISON
Thomas Edison was an American inventor,
entrepreneur, and businessman, widely
recognized for his contributions to modern
life. He is best known for inventing the John Vincent Atanasoff and Clifford Berry
electric light bulb, phonograph, and motion are pivotal figures in the history of
pictures, though he held over 1,000 patents computing, credited with creating the first
in his lifetime. Edison played a key role in electronic digital computer, the Atanasoff-
developing many technologies that are Berry Computer (ABC), during the 1940s.
central to daily life today Their work laid the foundation for modern
computing by introducing key concepts
such as binary data representation and the
use of electronic components instead of
mechanical ones.

PHILO FRANSWORTH
Philo Farnsworth's contributions to
television technology were pivotal,
particularly with his development of the
first fully electronic television system. His
groundbreaking work in 1927, which
included the successful transmission of the
first electronic television image, marked a
ALEXANDER GRAHAM BELL
significant milestone in the evolution of
broadcasting technology Alexander Graham Bell was a Scottish-born
inventor, scientist, and engineer, best
known for inventing the telephone. Born on
March 3, 1847, in Edinburgh, Scotland, Bell's
work had a lasting impact on
communication technologies. In 1876, he
was awarded the first US patent for the
invention of the telephone, revolutionizing
the way people communicated over long
distances.

JOHN VINCENT ATANASOFF and


CLIFFORD BERRY
Martin Cooper is an American engineer and
inventor, best known for his role in the
development of the first portable mobile
phone. He worked at Motorola and is
credited with making the first public mobile
phone call on a handheld device on April 3,
1973.

PRESPER ECKERT
It seems like you meant Presper Eckert.
John Presper Eckert was an American
engineer and computer scientist best RAY TOMLINSON
known for co-inventing the first general- Ray Tomlinson is best known for his
purpose electronic computer, the ENIAC pioneering work in developing email and
(Electronic Numerical Integrator and the use of the "@" symbol in email
Computer), along with John W. Mauchly. addresses. In 1971, while working at Bolt,
ENIAC, developed during the 1940s, was a Beranek, and Newman (BBN), Tomlinson
groundbreaking machine in the field of sent the first networked email on the
computing and is considered one of the first ARPANET (the precursor to the internet),
programmable digital computers revolutionizing communication by allowing
messages to be sent between different
computers across networks.

JOHN MAUCHLY
John W. Mauchly was an American physicist
and computer scientist, best known for his
role in co-inventing the ENIAC (Electronic
MARTIN COOPER Numerical Integrator and Computer), one of
the earliest general-purpose electronic
computers. Along with John Presper Eckert,
Mauchly developed the ENIAC during the
1940s, which was capable of performing a
wide range of calculations much faster than
previous machines

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