Monday, July 23, 2018

Marconi #7

The Marconi biography includes the following. I will be brief.

Marconi wins the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1909. He was nominated a few times before. He was the first entrepreneur to win the prize. He shared it with a German, Karl Ferdinand Braun, who contributed significantly to the development of radio and television technology.

In 1909 two ships collided, one with 1200 passengers. Marconi's wireless system aided a quick rescue response. Only six lives were lost, demonstrating the benefit to mankind made possible by wireless.

After H. Cuthbert Hall was ousted, Marconi took on much of what Hall had done. In 1910, though, Godfrey Isaacs joined the firm, which gave Marconi more time to devote to research and experiments.

In 1911 Italy declared war on the Ottoman Empire in defense of Italians in northern Africa. Then Italians started building wireless stations on Africa's northern coast. This was the third time wireless was used in war.

On 10 April 1912 the passenger ship Titanic left Ireland headed west to New York, with 2,208 (estimated) passengers and crew. The ship had the then-best wireless equipment aboard. On 14 April, four days into the crossing and about 375 miles (600 km) south of Newfoundland, she hit an iceberg at 11:40 p.m. ship's time. The wireless operator sent distress signals while the ship was sinking. Unfortunately, the closest ship to receive the signal, the Carpathia wasn't very close. Almost two hours after the collision the Carpathia arrived and rescued an estimated 705 survivors. Many people gave Marconi a lot of credit for saving the survivors.

In 2012 the British Postal Office's not yet signed agreement with a British Marconi Company made the news. The agreement drew criticism for the terms being too favorable to Marconi's business and political insiders who made investment gains from holding stock in Marconi companies (ref. Marconi scandal).

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