Situated on a barren and lonely headland of the coast of Galway, three miles from the town of Clifden, is the Irish station of the Marconi transatlantic wireless telegraph system. No less barren ...
The place is the historic lecture theater of the Royal Institution in London. The date is the 4th of June 1903, and the inventor, Guglielmo Marconi, is about to demonstrate his new wireless system ...
In November 1916, E.J. Nally, vice president of the American division of the Marconi Wireless Telegraph Company, received an unusual memo from one of his young assistants. The memo depicted a ...
THE efficiency of the system of wireless telegraphy developed by Mr. Marconi has recently been put to some striking tests, with results which are in every respect satisfactory. During the yacht ...
The Wireless Telegraph and Signal Company, popularly known as the Marconi Company after its founder, Guglielmo Marconi, was established mainly to provide wireless telegraphy services to ships at sea.
Marconi set up the Wireless Telegraph & Signal Company Ltd, which was one of the six founders of the British Broadcasting Company in 1922. Its first London station was called 2LO, and was ...
There are other Marconi radios just exactly the same ... to cut into the deteriorating ship and recover its Marconi wireless telegraph machine, before it's irretrievably lost.
In 1897, he set up The Wireless Telegraph and Signal Company in 1897 with the first patent for a radio-wave based communication system. One year later, Marconi opened the world's first ever radio ...
In November 1916, E.J. Nally, vice president of the American division of the Marconi Wireless Telegraph Company, received an unusual memo from one of his young assistants. The memo depicted a ...