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  1. Aug 31, 2018 · But through the 1980s and 90s, with the rise of cable TV and the explosion of ancillary devices such as video recorders, DVD players and games consoles, the remote became… rather bloated.

  2. Aug 1, 2014 · TV sets occupied more than 95 percent of American households by 1969. A decade later, only 17 percent of TV households were using a remote control.

    • Caetlin Benson-Allott
    • Zenith Debuts World's First Remote Control
    • The Flash-Matic Wireless Remote
    • Zenith Design Becomes The Standard
    • Meet Robert Adler
    • Sources

    The Zenith Radio Corporation created the very first television remote control in 1950 called "Lazy Bone." The Lazy Bone could turn a television on and off as well as change channels. However, it was not a wireless remote control. The Lazy Bone remote control was attached to the television by a bulky cable. It turned out that consumers did not like ...

    It was Zenith engineer Eugene Polley (1915–2012) who created the "Flash-matic," the first wireless TV remote in 1955. The Flash-matic operated by means of four photocells, one in each corner of the TV screen. The viewer used a directional flashlight to activate the four control functions, which turned the picture and sound on and off as well as tur...

    The improved "Zenith Space Command" remote control went into commercial production in 1956. This time, Zenith engineer Robert Adler (1913–2007) designed the Space Command based on ultrasonics. Ultrasonic remote controls remained the dominant design for the next 25 years, and, as the name suggests, they worked using ultrasound waves. The Space Comma...

    Robert Adlerwas associate director of research at Zenith in the 1950s when the company’s founder-president E.F. McDonald Jr. (1886–1958) challenged his engineers to develop a device to "tune out annoying commercials," resulting in the prototype remote control. Robert Adler held 180 patents for electronic devices, whose applications run from the eso...

    Acebrón, Juan A., and Renato Spigler. "The Remote Control and Beyond: The Legacy of Robert Adler." SIAM News40.5(2007).
    Luplow, Wayne C., and John L. Taylor. "Channel Surfing Redux: A Brief History of the TV Remote Control and a Tribute to Its Coinventors." IEEE Consumer Electronics Magazine1.4 (2012):24–29.
    "Eugene Polley Obituary: Father of the Flash-Matic, the First Wireless TV Remote Control." The Guardian, May 23, 2012.
    Hafner, Katie. "Robert Adler, Zenith Physicist, Dies at 93." The New York Times, February 20, 2007.
    • Mary Bellis
  3. Feb 27, 2024 · Renowned Serbian-American inventor Nikola Tesla created one of the world's first wireless remote controls, which he unveiled at Madison Square Garden in New York City in 1898. He called his fledgling system, which could be used to control a range of mechanical contraptions, a "teleautomaton."

    • Nathan Chandler
  4. Jun 21, 2024 · Explore the fascinating evolution of TV remote controls, from wired to wireless, and discover JubileeTV's simple universal remote for seniors with a unique feature that allows families to control their elderly parent's TV remotely.

  5. Apr 8, 2022 · After ultrasonic and infrared remotes, the next best remote — your smartphone — might already be in your hand. They were dark, dark days, full of strife and incalculable labor. We're talking about the years before the invention of The Clicker: the TV remote control.

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  7. Jul 16, 2024 · Self-taught Chicago mechanical engineer Eugene Polley invented the first wireless TV remote control in 1955, but his contribution was nearly erased by later innovations.

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