The Best Documentary on the
History of Television |
World Documentaries.
A television, commonly referred to as TV, telly or the tube, is a telecommunication medium used for transmitting sound with moving images in monochrome (black-and-white), colour, or in three dimensions. It can refer to a television set, a television program, or the medium of television transmission.
Television is a mass medium, for entertainment, educational television, news and advertising .
Television became available in crude experimental forms in the late
1920s. After
World War II, an improved form became popular in the
United States and
Britain, and television sets became commonplace in homes, businesses, and institutions. During the
1950s, television was the primary medium for influencing public opinion.[1] In the mid-1960s, color broadcasting was introduced in the US and most other developed countries. The availability of storage media such as
VHS tape (
1976),
DVDs (
1997), and high-definition
Blu-ray Discs (
2006) enabled viewers to watch recorded material such as movies.
At the end of the first decade of the
2000s, digital television transmissions greatly increased in popularity. Another development was the move from standard-definition television (
SDTV)(576i, with 576 interlaced lines of resolution and 480i) to high-definition television (
HDTV), which provides a resolution that is substantially higher. HDTV may be transmitted in various formats: 1080p, 1080i and 720p. Since
2010, with the invention of smart television,
Internet television has increased the availability of television programs and movies via the
Internet through services such as Netflix, iPlayer, Hulu, Roku and Chromecast.
In
2013, 79% of the world's households owned a television set.[2] The replacement of early bulky, high-voltage cathode ray tube (
CRT) screen displays with compact, energy-efficient, flat-panel alternative technologies such as plasma displays, LCDs (both fluorescent-backlit and
LED), and
OLED displays was a hardware revolution that began with computer monitors in the late
1990s. Most TV sets sold in the 2000s were flat-panel, mainly
LEDs.
Major manufacturers announced the discontinuation of
CRT,
DLP, plasma, and even fluorescent-backlit LCDs by the mid-2010s.[
3][4][5] LEDs are expected to be replaced gradually by
OLEDs in the near future.[6] Also, major manufacturers have announced that they will increasingly produce smart TV sets in the mid-2010s.[
7][8][9]
Smart TVs with integrated Internet and Web
2.0 functions are expected to become the dominant form of television set by the late 2010s.
Television signals were initially distributed only as terrestrial television using high-powered radio-frequency transmitters to broadcast the signal to individual television receivers. Alternatively television signals are distributed by co-axial cable or optical fibre, satellite systems and via the Internet. Until the early 2000s, these were transmitted as analog signals but countries started switching to digital, this transition is expected to be completed worldwide by late 2010s. A standard television set is composed of multiple internal electronic circuits, including a tuner for receiving and decoding broadcast signals. A visual display device which lacks a tuner is correctly called a video monitor rather than a television.
Read more: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Television
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- published: 16 Sep 2015
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