Quick, name someone influential in the history of radio. Who do did you think of? Marconi? Tesla? Armstrong? Hertz? Perhaps Sarnoff? We bet only a handful would have said Reginald Fessenden. That’s a ...
Kevin P. Duffus is the author of “The Inventor Reginald Fessenden and the Origins of American Radio on North Carolina’s Outer ...
There was probably no moment more magical or terrifying than Reginald Fessenden's radio broadcast across the Atlantic Ocean on December 24, 1906. Reginald Aubrey Fessenden — or Reg, as he was known — ...
Fessenden in his later years. Courtesy of the State Archives of North Carolina. While Guglielmo Marconi sent the first message by wireless in 1896, Canadian inventor Reginald Fessenden saw greater ...
Dec. 12, 1901 marks the date of the first radio transmission across the Atlantic by Reginald Fessenden. Scott Mason, our Tar Heel Traveler, tells us more about Fessenden and his accomplishment. Dec.
This December Brings a Big Radio Anniversary. But Why Did Fessenden Miss the Point? One-hundred-and-three years ago, Professor Reginald Audrey Fessenden, an educator, engineer and inventor, began ...
Matt Largey profiles one of radio's unsung pioneers, marking the centennial of the first voice broadcast. On Dec. 24, 1906, Morse code gave way to the human voice and a Handel piece heard by sailors ...
Arturo Azcorra, Director of IMDEA Networks Institute, Professor of Telematics Engineering at Carlos III University of Madrid and Vice-President of 5TONIC, has received the prestigious Reginald ...
Scientific American is part of Springer Nature, which owns or has commercial relations with thousands of scientific publications (many of them can be found at www ...
Arturo Azcorra, Director of IMDEA Networks Institute, Professor of Telematics Engineering at Carlos III University of Madrid and Vice-President of 5TONIC, has received the prestigious Reginald ...
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