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Word: radioed (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Telephone & Telegraph Co. (TIME, June 2) -has devised a machine for sending photographs by telephone, last week reported success in transmitting photographs by wireless. A picture sent from his wireless station at Malmaison, ten miles outside of Paris, was published in Le Matin. Convinced of the practicability of transmitting radio pictures between New York and Paris, he intends to establish receiving posts in New York in September...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Photos by Radio | 6/30/1924 | See Source »

...handicaps of stormy weather, occasioning atmospheric interferences, and of the proximity of high power electric engines. Transmission of each photograph took five minutes. The New York Tel. & Tel. inventors have also conducted successful experiments in wireless photography. Their telephone device is applicable to the transmission of pictures by radio whenever atmospheric conditions are such that steadiness of transmission and freedom from interference can be assured. This, they declare, has been fully demonstrated. The Belin machine, however, differs from the Tel. & Tel. machine. The original record from which Belin transmits his pictures must be etched upon a brass cylinder. The Telephone...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Photos by Radio | 6/30/1924 | See Source »

...Francis Jenkins, of Washington, D. C, has succeeded in transmitting photographs from Washington to Philadelphia by radio and has sent wireless motion pictures from one room to the next. His achievement has the honor of priority, since he was sending both radio and wire pictures two years ago. His apparatus employs optical means, impressing the photographs point by point upon a light-sensitive cell. This cell changes the light and shade variations into telephone or radio current waves. His device differs from the Belin and from the Telephone Company machines...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Photos by Radio | 6/30/1924 | See Source »

...Hammond and Franklin Pierce Adams, two famed Manhattan colyumists. Said Hammond: 'The keynote speech of Congressman Burton. . . an aged man, was a complete assemblage of all the honest and senile platitudes. . . It was the longest, dullest speech that I have ever heard.' Said Adams: 'Over the radio, applause for a platitude sounds even sillier than it does when you're one of the applauders yourself...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Imaginary Interviews: Jun. 23, 1924 | 6/23/1924 | See Source »

Jazz addicts who fail to get sufficient syncopation over the radio should personally tune in on Kid Boots, Chariot's Revue, Poppy, I'll Say She Is, Keep Kool

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Theatre: The Best Plays: Jun. 23, 1924 | 6/23/1924 | See Source »

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