I have seen a 1974 Italian made Salora TV 28" color screen in 2005 that worked day and night nonstop with fantastic color and contrast that only a $5 fuse was able to fix.
And I'm 157 years old! I personally designed and produced all these TVs at the factory! And by the way, I remember you, you were such a little evil dwarf, you constantly ran around and got tangled between your legs and broke TVs. I caught you and beat you constantly, I’m even surprised that you’re still alive.
А мне 157 лет ! Я все эти телевизоры лично проектировал и выпускал на фабрике! И тебя кстати я помню , ты такой маленький злой карлик , постоянно бегал и путался между ног и ломал телевизоры. Я тебя ловил и постоянно бил, Я даже удивлён что ты до сих пор живой.
And I'm 157 years old! I personally designed and produced all these TVs at the factory! And by the way, I remember you, you were such a little evil dwarf, you constantly ran around and got tangled between your legs and broke TVs. I caught you and beat you constantly, I’m even surprised that you’re still alive.
Forget the technology for a moment. Just think about the atmosphere, the air you could breathe easily and have a cup of tea in your own time whilst you were relaxing.
I didn't see any of the big 1970s consoles in this video. Also my dad bought my grandparents a huge projection TV in the early 90s, and I saw nothing like that here. But, this was still interesting. Thanks.
My uncle "ALBERT" bought an RCA color television around 1965 and it was my favorite to watch "THE WONDERFUL WORLD OF DISNEY" in color ! Back at my mom's house , we only had the old black and white television .
No one is going to ever say they miss those old TVs. They were heavy, had small screens, and looked pretty lousy not really changing in any major way until the past 20 years. I grew up in the 60's watching old black and white sets so I for one really appreciate what we have now and they are very reasonably priced due to so much competition.
I bet you throw away the best trash, 😂 We homeless will never starve as long as there's consumers like you buying brand new every year and throwing away a perfectly good last years model everything. You think homeless buy them couchs and dressers you see under the interstate? Nope we drag them from your neighborhood sidewalk where you put it. And the money, jewelry, and secrets we find in your trash. You take grandpa's suits to goodwill, gold moneyclips in the pockets, with money. Cufflinks, that ring he was gonna give you but he died.... I check the pockets of all them suits. And then go shopping. And I haven't owned a t.v. in 18 years. Obama gave me this phone, 600. Cash and 300 foodstamps every month. And I work day labor. Plus yalls scraps, puts me in a better position then the middleclass these days.
3:53 my favorite on # Sony KX-27HF1, Advent of the "Profile" series. A monitor with versatile AV output (including video and teletext) was marketed as a single unit. This TV was developed based on a new modular concept, incorporating a TV tuner, stereo amplifier and other components.
There were some oddities amongst early television sets that didn't survive, like the late 1960s bubble shaped ones and the Sony Watchman miniature portable and Sinclair portable mini television. In the UK before the 1980s everyone rented their television sets, unless they were very rich. If they broke down an engineer would visit from the rental firm and fix them.
They needed to be: partly the need to hold all the components - a substantial chassis, with many valves ("toobs" in US), transformenrs, etc., not to mention the picture tube itself (which also needed protecting); and partly, if you were paying a small fortune for one, you wanted it to be supplied in a reasonably good-quality cabinet! Given the relative price of modern flat-screen sets, it's not surprising they aren't as tough, plus they don't need to be and people don't _want_ them to be heavy.
They were, but when something went wrong, you had to have the repairman come over to fix it. Today's flat screens are cheap enough to replace immediately.
dudo mucho que ese samsung del min 3:18 sea de 1979 ni de lejos se ve que es de esa epoca por lo menos por muy antiguo que sea es un modelo quizas 1998 o mejor 2000s se ve a simple vista el material el diseño y todo algo que no se hacia aun a finales delos 70s debio ser un error
That's right, at that time Samsung was still starting to manufacture color TVs, although it was still irrelevant, as was LG, which still sold TVs with the goldstar brand, at that time Sony, Philips, Toshiba, Mitsubishi stood out. , Sanyo, sharp
Really the television born in 1921 after WWII Developer grownnig on countries was U. S . , Japan and Europe this is evolution from Sony. Thats all, thank you for this data.
Some of the _concepts_ were thought about - and even patented - before the rest of the technology had reached the point where a complete system was practical. (The Nipkow/Nipkov disc, for example, and the cathode ray tube.) The first actual demonstrations of working systems were indeed 1920s/'30s.
Am now 40 years old i can't believe am this old . I remember the great wall tv my father bought the year 1997 in Kenya to have A television 1990 hey it's not a joke ask our president ruto
I know a lot about early television, and the first three photos are labelled incorrectly, television did not exist until the mid-20s. There were certainly no television sets in 1880, 1890 or 1900. The photo labelled 1890 shows John Logie Baird, who was only 2 years old in 1890!!
When I was a kid back in the 2000's we had those cube LG TV, you hit the screen it's like a fish tube, I used to climb up that TV as if I climbed up a cliff. It comes with one rod at top of the TV that communicates with like a satellite or smth.
No, most people would watch them in a movie theatre. Pre WWII television was almost non-existant and the surviving television sets of that era are super rare today (Like, even broken and needing restoration ones sell for 10,000 dollars). Before WWII TV was SUPER expensive and there were very few TV stations, so only the rich had TV in the home.
Aqui no Brasil até os anos 80 tinhamos tvs dos anos 50 em preto e branco, após os anos 2000 que popularizou as tvs em cores e 2010 as tvs finas ou LEDs
How many people remember the commercial where this animated man sings : WOW ! I SAW COLOR TV DEPENDABLE , NATURAL COLOR TV I KNOW WHAT I'VE BEEN MISSING NOW WOW ! I SAW COLOR TV WOW !