Chapter 5
Chapter 5
• Heinrich Hertz
• Proved Maxwell’s theories (1880s)
• Advanced the development of wireless communication
Figure 5.1: The Electromagnetic Spectrum
How We Got Here: The Early Development of
Radio (3 of 7)
• Guglielmo Marconi
• Received a patent for wireless telegraphy—a form of voiceless point-
to-point communication—in England in 1896
• Alexander Popov
• Made parallel discoveries in Russia; sent and received wireless
messages in May 1895
• Nikola Tesla
• Invented a wireless system in 1892
• Marconi used much of Tesla’s work, and for years Tesla was not
associated with the invention of radio
• In 1943, Supreme Court overturned Marconi’s wireless patent and
deemed Tesla the inventor of radio
How We Got Here: The Early Development of
Radio (4 of 7)
• Lee De Forest
• Wrote the first Ph.D. dissertation on wireless technology in 1899
• Wireless telephony: wireless voice and music transmission
• Biggest breakthrough was the development of the Audion
vacuum tube, which detected radio signals and amplified them
• Reginald Fessenden
• Engineer who worked for General Electric, improving wireless
signals
• First voice broadcast in 1906
• World War I
• Navy took control of radio
• Corporate heads and government leaders conspired to
make sure radio served American interests
How We Got Here: The Early Development of
Radio (6 of 7)
• Radio Corporation of America (RCA): acquired
American Marconi and radio patents of other U.S.
companies
• With its patent-pool arrangement, RCA took the lead
in expanding American communication technology
throughout the world
• William Paley
• Buys a controlling share in the fledgling company and launches
new concepts and strategies
• Hires PR guru Edward Bernays to polish company image
• Introduces option time, in which the network pays affiliate stations
$50/hr for an option on a portion of their time
• Raids NBC for top talent
The Evolution of U.S. Radio (7 of 11)
• With no restrictions on operation, hundreds of stations
clog the airwaves in 1926, causing poor reception