One hour of TV was enough to start with

@indexer (4852)
Leicester, England
October 4, 2018 6:23am CST
On 2nd November 1936 the very first television broadcast by the BBC was made. It began at 3pm and lasted for exactly one hour. It was received by around 400 people in the London area who had been supplied with “Baird Televisors” and consisted of speeches, a news bulletin, and a variety show that included singing, jugglers, comedians and dancers. All very informative and entertaining! The BBC had a problem from the outset because two rival transmission technologies were on offer – those offered by John Logie Baird – who had made the decisive breakthrough in the development of television in 1926 – and the Marconi-EMI joint venture. That first broadcast used the Baird system, with the choice being made by the traditional British method of tossing a coin! However, the rival system eventually prevailed. But why only one hour of broadcasting to start with? There were several reasons, one being a lack of suitable material! Other reasons were the belief that viewers (who were referred to as “lookers-in” in the early days) would suffer from eye strain if they watched for too long, and a concern that too much television would disrupt family life. It could just be that they were right about this one!
4 people like this
3 responses
@crossbones27 (53005)
• Mojave, California
4 Oct 18
I actually have the eye care switcher on this laptop and tell you what. If off my eyes start twitching bad because how I make a living staring at this dumb screen all day. Funny how they thought of that stuff then, now only do it because scared they get sued. I know they included it on this one, but sister did not get or brother and bought computers after me. Someone was just looking out and the rest we can make money. I do not know get irritated at that stuff so is neat when someone invents something and at least worries about the side effects. Thanks for posting this info.
2 people like this
@franxav (14597)
• India
4 Oct 18
They were so right about TV watching strains and even spoils eyes. Their concern about family life getting disrupted is not very far from truth too.
2 people like this
@simplfred (20641)
• Philippines
4 Oct 18
I think they are saying the right stuff about the eye way back then. Gladly, materials of Televisions were upgraded as time goes by. But still to overused our eye is not good even this days.
1 person likes this
@indexer (4852)
• Leicester, England
4 Oct 18
Indeed. Early screens were very flickery and used a "line" system with a much poorer resolution than what came later. Also, the early screens were very small.
2 people like this