Contents
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Meeting Receiver Demand Meeting Receiver Demand
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The 1927 Radio Act The 1927 Radio Act
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The Jenkins Television Laboratory The Jenkins Television Laboratory
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Ever Promoting the Future Ever Promoting the Future
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Demonstration for Federal Radio Commissioners Demonstration for Federal Radio Commissioners
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W3XK-TV Inaugural Program W3XK-TV Inaugural Program
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Technical Standards Advance Technical Standards Advance
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Cite
Abstract
This chapter focuses on C. Francis Jenkins' pioneering work in radio. In 1925, Jenkins began his first experimental television station in Washington, D.C. Called 3XK (later W3XK-TV), it was among the first licensed experimental television stations in the United States. Jenkins envisioned that it would follow patterns established in the growth of commercial radio. This chapter first considers Jenkins' radio-related ideas, including receivers called “Radiovisor Kits,” and goes on to discuss some of the challenges he faced in trying to improve receiver technology. It then considers the Radio Act of 1927, which shifted the Department of Commerce's licensing authority to a new Federal Radio Commission, along with Jenkins' concept for a large theater-sized television screen. It also recounts Jenkins' demonstration of his television technology for Federal Radio Commissioners in 1928 and the W3XK inaugural programming that same year. Finally, it assesses Jenkins' role in the development of television standards.
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