Restoring Baird's Image

Portada
IET, 2000 - 295 páginas

John Logie Baird, Britain's foremost television pioneer, experimented with video recording onto gramophone discs in the late 1920s. Though unsuccessful at the time, his experiments resulted in several videodiscs, some 25 years before the videotape recorder became practical. These videodiscs - called Phonovision - remained neglected over the decades, considered by experts as unplayable.

In the early 1980s, the author sought out and restored the surviving Phonovision discs. Using computer-based techniques in an investigation reminiscent of an archaeological dig, the author has not only revealed the images on the discs but also uncovered details of how the recordings were made. The Phonovision discs have now become recognised as one of Baird's most important legacies.

In 1996 and 1998, amateur 'off-air' recordings of the BBC's 30-line Television Service (1932-35) were found, giving us our first view of what viewers were then watching. The author's restoration overturns established views on mechanically scanned television, providing us today with a true measure of Britain's heritage of television programme-making before electronic television.

As well as helping to explain a poorly understood and complex period in television's history, this unique book, heavily illustrated with previously unpublished or rarely-seen historic photographs restored by the author, sheds light on the achievements of Baird, the development of video recording and the definition and invention of television itself.

 

Contenido

The DayBaird Letters
35
Bairds Television Format
42
Demonstrations and Remonstrations
51
Phonovision
57
The Royal Television Society
63
The Phonovision Patents
71
Personnae
78
A Wellsian Future from the 19th Century
84
Television Develops
169
Its All in the Groove
199
Capturing the Vision
229
Revising History
265
Annex
279
Index
287
60
289
83
295

5
93
Discoveries
129

Términos y frases comunes

Información bibliográfica