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- @
- Marconi's father,
- an Italian country
- gentleman, wanted
- his son to study
- music, but Marconi
- preferred to play
- with electrical
- apparatus in the
- attic. His first
- experiments with
- wireless tele-
- graphy were
- conducted in a
- farmyard barn
- #
- A converted
- steam wagon
- containing his
- wireless equip-
- ment gave Marconi
- the mobility to
- experiment with
- different locations
- and different
- heights, and so find
- the perfect spot for
- transmitting and
- receiving
- #
- Marconi's great
- triumph came in
- 1901 when he
- successfully
- sent signals from
- Cornwall, England,
- to Newfoundland
- in Canada. The
- news caused a
- sensation around
- the world
- #
- TO COME from
- science writer
- #
- Marconi had a
- fully equipped
- radio room on his
- yacht, Elettra. He
- sailed around the
- Atlantic Ocean
- conducting
- experiments on
- the use of radio
- for direction
- finding. His work
- enabled navigators
- to chart a course
- through fog
- without the risk
- of collision
- @
- The uses of radio
- caught the public
- imagination in
- 1910 when the
- murderer Dr.
- Crippen fled from
- England. Wireless
- messages passed
- from ship to
- shore ensured his
- arrest upon
- arrival in Canada
- #
- When the
- 'unsinkable'
- Titanic sunk
- in 1912 the
- loss of life
- might have
- been even
- greater had
- it not been
- for distress
- messages
- broadcast by
- wireless from
- on board the ship
- #
- By the Thirties,
- millions of
- households had
- radios (or
- 'wirelesses', as
- they were called
- in Britain). The
- radio became an
- important social
- glue: everyone
- listened to the
- same broadcasts,
- heard the same
- news, and came
- to know the
- sound of their
- leaders' voices
- #
- By the Sixties
- radio waves could
- be transmitted
- far beyond the
- earth to other
- planets. Radio
- telescopes looked
- far beyond our
- solar system.
- Marconi's inven-
- tion helped make
- possible the
- exploration
- of space
- @
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