Communication: From Hieroglyphs to HyperlinksKingfisher, 15.11.2007 - 64 Seiten Delve into the many technologies that we use to share information. From making calls on satellite phones to sending e-mails, this is an exciting look at the developments that have revolutionized communication. |
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Seite 27
... cable across the English Channel in 1850. Although it broke within a week , a thicker cable that was laid two years later was a success . Morse wanted the telegraph to transmit only numbers 0-9 , but Alfred Vail persuaded him to use a ...
... cable across the English Channel in 1850. Although it broke within a week , a thicker cable that was laid two years later was a success . Morse wanted the telegraph to transmit only numbers 0-9 , but Alfred Vail persuaded him to use a ...
Seite 28
... cable . The first one linked Great Britain with neighboring France , and 16 years later the world's biggest steamship , Great Eastern , unreeled a cable to link Europe and the U.S. By 1880 lines stretched around the world . Morse's ...
... cable . The first one linked Great Britain with neighboring France , and 16 years later the world's biggest steamship , Great Eastern , unreeled a cable to link Europe and the U.S. By 1880 lines stretched around the world . Morse's ...
Seite 46
... cable or satellite knows , more channels does not always mean better viewing because good television programs are ... cable television allow us to see a huge variety of shows about all types of special interests and hobbies . Equally as ...
... cable or satellite knows , more channels does not always mean better viewing because good television programs are ... cable television allow us to see a huge variety of shows about all types of special interests and hobbies . Equally as ...
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
advertisements Alamy Alfred Vail Alois Senefelder alphabet animals ARPANET Art Archive beacons broadcast cable camcorders camera cave cell phones cellular cipher clever color communication technologies compact disc computer network copied Corbis created cursus publicus Daguerre disc Earth easy Edison electronic entertainment expressions film flags gestures Getty Greek Guglielmo Marconi Gutenberg hieroglyphics humans idea images Internet invention inventor Johannes Gutenberg kinetoscope learned to speak letters linked machine magazines Mechanical televisions MEPL messenger services missiles Morse code movie MP3s newspapers orbit paintings paper photographs picture writing postal services printers printing quickly radar radio waves replaced Roman Roman alphabet runners Samuel Morse Satellite telephones scientists screen scribes send messages services began ships shows spread stations stories Sumerians talk telegraph telephone calls television sets Thomas Edison Tim Berners-Lee tiny today's viewers visual signals watch wires words