brainhulk
Diamond Member
- Sep 14, 2007
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This was not the first remote control. The first was by Zenith. Their R&D dept. was given the instruction to come up with a way to turn a television set on and off and change the channel - WITHOUT batteries (no kidding, that's what the marketing department decided the American public needed)! The original remote used two tiny "tuning forks", one for on/off, the other for channel. Each had a single button that you pressed down. A striker hit the little noisemaker, which produced an ultrasonic pitch, too high to be heard by people (I wonder about dogs?). The channel button caused the channel to go up one notch each time the button was pressed - and eventually you got back to where you started. I know you kids will have a hard time beliveing this, but there were only 12 possible channels, 2 - 13 "VHF" - Very High Frequqency- channels (of which only three or four would be used in a good-sized city), plus one slot for "UHF" Ultra High Frequency (there were usually only 2 or 3 stations that used that set of frequencies in those days). And before you ask, "channel 1" encompased the UHF "channels". If you wanted to see a UHF channel, you set the main selector to "UHF" and then had to get off your butt and go to the TV and twiddle the separate UHF tuning knob, it was tricky to get tuned in. I won't go into why there are two separate channel sections, look it up yourself. There was no volume control. And no batteries!
The remote control in this case is big because of the batteries: probably a couple of D cells, maybe 4 C cells. It worked by infrared light (apparently the first to do so), the same as today's. What was different is that it was analog - each function had a separate "frequency", and you held down the button as long as necessary to get the effect you were trying for, whereas today's all use the same frequency (you can even user your Palm or PocketPC PDA as a remote control!), but each button produces a different series of pulses on that frequency - off=0, on=1 - digital, get it?
Wow, I didn't know they had wireless remote controls in the 60's...my buddy still has his old VCR with a wired remote control in his attic. Some interesting comments here about how the original remotes used a high-pitched tuning fork: (or two)
http://bitsandpieces.us/2011/04/21/the-first-television-remote-control/
More here:
https://archive.org/details/Televisi1961
My Dad had a TV shop in the '50's and 70's, we had one of those, I could change channels by clanging my belt buckle LOL, not that there was much on, only 3 channels and one UHF channel.
I can if I were to randomly watch something on you tube like that and loop em still would be these personally.I cant stop watching this...
Also found some other stuff the back up group does including this New Orleans jazz style cover of Guns and Roses Sweet child of Mine pretty good to.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0UjWqQPWmsY
Video of Falcon 9 Reusable (F9R) taking its first test flight at our rocket development facility. F9R lifts off from a launch mount to a height of approximately 250m, hovers and then returns for landing just next to the launch stand. Early flights of F9R will take off with legs fixed in the down position. However, we will soon be transitioning to liftoff with legs stowed against the side of the rocket and then extending them just before landing.
The F9R testing program is the next step towards reusability following completion of the Grasshopper program last year (Grasshopper can be seen in the background of this video). Future testing, including that in New Mexico, will be conducted using the first stage of a F9R as shown here, which is essentially a Falcon 9 v1.1 first stage with legs. F9R test flights in New Mexico will allow us to test at higher altitudes than we are permitted for at our test site in Texas, to do more with unpowered guidance and to prove out landing cases that are more-flight like.
I cant stop watching this...
Also found some other stuff the back up group does including this New Orleans jazz style cover of Guns and Roses Sweet child of Mine pretty good to.
It's kinda like a History Test but with [beeeeeep] and bewbs.
If you post any spoilers the mods will threaten to ban you... but to my book bros..
R+L=J You know what I'm talking about
...an Adventure where every lead character faces mortal danger but only Sean Bean dies... gee, haven't seen that before...
I had met a girl and I had to go to the Crew show so I brought her backstage. Nikki looks at her and says "I want to f*ck you. She doesn't say no, so he pulls down her pants and they have sex in front of everybody.