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  1. John Logie Baird. 1888-1946. Scottish Inventor. J ohn Logie Baird is not credited as the inventor of the television, though he did create the first working television set in 1923. He went on to a number of "firsts," including the first color transmission. Yet his was a mechanical rather than an electronic system, and by the mid-1930s it would ...

  2. John Logie Baird FRSE (August 14, 1888 - June 14, 1946) was a Scottish scientist, engineer, innovator, and inventor of the world's first television; the first publicly demonstrated color television system; and the first purely electronic color television picture tube. Baird's early technological successes and his role in the practical ...

  3. John Logie Baird was the first person to televise objects in motion. He produced televised images in outline in 1924, transmitted recognisable human faces in 1925 and demonstrated the televising of moving objects in 1926 to members of the Royal Institution. He demonstrated colour television in 1928. On 30 September 1929 Baird transmitted, by ...

  4. John Logie Baird 1888 - 1946. John Logie Baird. Known as ‘The Father of Television', John Logie Baird showed an early interest in engineering. He set up a telephone exchange in his bedroom to connect with his friends across the street. He was educated at the Glasgow and West of Scotland Technical College, however, the First World War ...

  5. John Logie Baird (August 14, 1888 - June 14, 1946) was a Scottish scientist, engineer, innovator and invent. RM G545AP – John Logie Baird, pioneer of television, has perfected his latest invention for showing television pictures in full natural colours. RM D96AM2 – John Logie Baird (1888-1946) Scottish electrical engineer; pioneer of ...

  6. John Logie Baird. (1888–1946). Scottish engineer John Logie Baird was a pioneer in the development of television. With a mechanical television system he invented, he became the first person to televise pictures of objects in motion. Baird was born on August 13, 1888, in Helensburgh, Dunbarton, Scotland.

  7. His achievements included high-definition colour and 3D television, and a system for sending messages very rapidly as television images. Baird died at home in Bexhill-on-Sea on 14 June 1946, and was buried in Helensburgh. In our public poll, John Logie Baird was voted the second most popular Scottish scientist from the past.

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