"JimCo" <
chem...@ksu.edu> wrote in message
news:5a55403f-52ce-41dd...@p6g2000yqi.googlegroups.com...
This is slightly off topic, but some time ago I read an
article in a
reputable scientific journal (I confess I don't recall which
one) that
said that Marconi has been mistakenly given credit for being
the
father of radio transmission. Presumably Nikola Tesla
achieved it
before Marconi did. Just an item of interest.
JimCo
I don't think its off topic at all.
What Marconi did was to combine several previous
discoveries to make a practical system for communication. He
was not the first to demonstrate the transmission of
electromagnetic energy nor to try using it for communication
but he was the first to persist and make a practical system
that could be commercially developed. The early radio site
I cited in an earlier post has some history of Marconi and
his work. Marconi was also an astute businessman, somewhat
unusual for an inventor. Marconi's insistence in
maintaining control over everything he produced eventually
got him into trouble with the United States Navy,
potentially his largest customer.
If you are interested in the beginnings of wireless and
its eventual development into the electronics industry and
broadcasting I suggest the following books:
1. _History of Communications-Electronics in the United
States Navy_ Capt. Linwood S. Howeth USN (Retired)
(Washington DC) 1963 U.S. Government Printing Office LOC
64-62870
This book is available on line free.
2. _Syntony and Spark-- The Origins of Radio_ Hugh
G.J.Aitken (princeton, N.J.) Princeton University Press and
John Wiley & son, 1976 ISBN 0-691-08377-0 Also available as
a paperback.
3. _Wireless: From Marconi's black-box to the audion_
2001, Sungook Hong Massachusetts Instutute of Technology
Press ISBN 978-0-262-09298-3 (hardcover) 978-0-262-51419-4
(paperback)
4. _Inventing American Broadcasting; 1899-1922_ Susan J.
Douglas, (Baltimore) 1989, The Johns Hopkins University
Press ISBN 0-8018-3387-6 (hardback) 0-8018-3832-0
(paperback).
5. _Invention & Innovation in the Radio Industry_ W.Rupert
Maclaurin (New York) 1949, The Macmillan Company
Dr. Maclaurin was director of the industrial relations
department of MIT at the time of writing. It contains a good
discussion of the background of the formation of the RCA.
The book was evidently reprinted in 1971 by Arno Press
but I am unsure if its currently available. A good public
or university library should have it.
These are all well-researched scholarly works but all
are clearly written and easy to read. The last seems not to
be relevant but very much is since it treats on the business
models of early wireless that carried over to the
broadcasting industry in the U.S.
When read as a group they will give you a very good
idea of how wireless started and how the RCA came into
being. RCA was very influential and developed quite
differently from the way is was envisioned by the Navy
personnel who first suggested a way of maintaining American
control of wireless following WW-1 without creating a
government monopoly.
The first book, as stated, is dowloadable from the web
free but hardcover originals are not rare or expensive. The
others must be purchased but are generally available and are
not expensive. Amazon will find all.
I will add to this a book on later development, which
is really an extension of the above.
_Making Silicon Valley: Innovation and the Growth of High
Tech 1930-1970_
Christophe Lecuyer, 2007, The MIT Press ISBN:
13-978-0-262-12281-8 (hard cover)
ISBN-10: 0262-12281-2 (paperback)