In 1894, Italian inventor
Guglielmo Marconi began developing a wireless communication using the then-newly discovered phenomenon of
radio waves, showing by 1901 that they could be transmitted across the Atlantic Ocean. This was the start of
wireless telegraphy by radio. Audio radio broadcasting began experimentally in the first decade of the 20th century. On 17 December 1902, a transmission from the Marconi station in
Glace Bay, Nova Scotia, Canada, became the world's first radio message to cross the Atlantic from North America. In 1904, a commercial service was established to transmit nightly news summaries to subscribing ships, which incorporated them into their onboard newspapers.
World War I accelerated the development of radio for
military communications. After the war, commercial radio
AM broadcasting began in the 1920s and became an important mass medium for entertainment and news.
World War II again accelerated the development of radio for the wartime purposes of aircraft and land communication, radio navigation, and radar. Development of stereo
FM broadcasting of radio began in the 1930s in the United States and the 1970s in the United Kingdom, displacing AM as the dominant commercial standard. On 25 March 1925,
John Logie Baird demonstrated the transmission of moving pictures at the London department store
Selfridges. Baird's device relied upon the
Nipkow disk and thus became known as the
mechanical television. It formed the basis of experimental broadcasts done by the
British Broadcasting Corporation beginning on 30 September 1929. However, for most of the 20th century, televisions depended on the
cathode-ray tube invented by
Karl Braun. The first version of such a television to show promise was produced by
Philo Farnsworth and demonstrated to his family on 7 September 1927. After
World War II, interrupted experiments resumed and television became an important home entertainment broadcast medium, using
VHF and
UHF spectrum.
Satellite broadcasting was initiated in the 1960s and moved into general industry usage in the 1970s, with DBS (Direct Broadcast Satellites) emerging in the 1980s. Originally, all broadcasting was composed of
analog signals using
analog transmission techniques but in the 2000s, broadcasters
switched to
digital signals using
digital transmission. An analog signal is any
continuous signal representing some other quantity, i.e.,
analogous to another quantity. For example, in an analog
audio signal, the instantaneous signal
voltage varies continuously with the
pressure of the sound waves. In contrast, a
digital signal represents the original time-varying quantity as a
sampled sequence of
quantized values which imposes some
bandwidth and
dynamic range constraints on the representation. In general usage, broadcasting most frequently refers to the transmission of information and entertainment programming from various sources to the general public: •
Analog audio radio (AM, FM) vs.
digital audio radio (
HD radio),
digital audio broadcasting (DAB),
satellite radio and
digital Radio Mondiale (DRM) •
Analog television vs.
digital television •
Wireless The world's technological capacity to receive information through one-way broadcast networks more than quadrupled during the two decades from 1986 to 2007, from 432
exabytes of (optimally compressed) information, to 1.9
zettabytes. This is the information equivalent of 55 newspapers per person per day in 1986, and 175 newspapers per person per day by 2007. ==Methods==