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Hundreds stood and waited patiently for the moment at which they would see television for the first time. I waited among them, growing ever more nervous. Now for the first time, I would see what I had devised 45 years ago. Finally, I reached the front row; a dark cloth was pushed to the side, and I saw before me a flickering image, not easy to discern." The system demonstrated was from the company
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after Nipkow – the "spiritual father" of the core element of first-generation television technology. He became honorary president of the "television council" of the "Imperial
Broadcasting Chamber". Nipkow's glory was used by Hitler and the Nazi government as a tool of National Socialist scientific
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for a patent covering an "electric telescope" for the "electric reproduction of illuminating objects", in the category "electric apparatuses". This was granted on 15 January 1885, retroactive to 6 January 1884. It is not known whether Nipkow ever attempted a practical realization of this disk, but
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The first television broadcasts used an optical-mechanical picture scanning method, the method that Nipkow had helped create with his disk; he could claim credit for the invention. Nipkow recounted his first sight of television at a Berlin radio show in 1928: "The televisions stood in dark cells.
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one may assume that he himself never constructed one. The patent lapsed after 15 years owing to lack of interest. Nipkow took up a position as a designer at an institute in Berlin-Buchloh and did not continue work on the broadcasting of pictures.
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propaganda. Nipkow died in Berlin in 1940 two days after his 80th birthday and had an official ceremony organised by the Nazi government.
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While still a student he conceived an "electric telescope", mainly known for the idea of using a spiral-perforated disk (
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Nipkow has been called the "father of television", together with other early figures of television history like
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had transmitted images telegraphically in the 1840s but the Nipkow disk improved the encoding process.
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Paul Nipkow. Erfinder des
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From the early 1930s, total electronic picture scanning, based on the work of
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365:(in German). Deutsches Patent- und Markenamt. 2 August 2019. Archived from
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484:"Seeing by Electricity" The Electrical World, New York, November, 14, 1885
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389:"Zum Gedenken an Paul Nipkow – B.Z. – die Stimme Berlins"
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Histoire de la télévision, site edited by André Lange
421:"Es begann in der Fernsehstube: TV wird 80 Jahre alt"
158:(22 August 1860 – 24 August 1940) was a German
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Nipkow's 'disc' from the patent application of 1884
494:"Une idée et son mythe : le disque de Nipkow"
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419:Schuldt, Rainer (22 March 2015).
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309:Fernsehsender "Paul Nipkow"
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156:Paul Julius Gottlieb Nipkow
18:Paul Julius Gottlieb Nipkow
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299:"Paul Nipkow" Transmitter
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204:(now Lębork) in the
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140:Significant advance
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305:television service
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184:The first regular
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76:Kingdom of Prussia
403:"Nipkow 23.81930"
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257:Nipkow disk
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231:Nipkow disk
225:Adolf Slaby
168:Nipkow disk
134:Nipkow disk
105:Nationality
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286:Telefunken
196:Beginnings
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160:technician
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316:See also
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