Saturday, September 11, 2010

Let's go to Paris and celebrate the jet's centennial!

6 comments:

Mr roT said...

When are the French celebrating their invention of the telephone?

Tecumseh said...

On September 28:

In 1854 Charles Bourseul, a French telegrapher, published a plan for conveying sounds and even speech by electricity in the magazine L'Illustration (Paris). Bourseul's ideas were also published in Didaskalia (Frankfurt am Main) on September 28, 1854: "Suppose", he explained, “that a man speaks near a movable disc sufficiently flexible to lose none of the vibrations of the voice; that this disc alternately makes and breaks the currents from a battery: you may have at a distance another disc which will simultaneously execute the same vibrations.... It is certain that, in a more or less distant future, speech will be transmitted by electricity. I have made experiments in this direction; they are delicate and demand time and patience, but the approximations obtained promise a favourable result."

Mr roT said...

Intersting Bourseul. Similarly to Coanda, he was an early developer of the wrong approach to something.

The make-break current phone and the thermojet.

We'll have to wait till 2054 for Bourseul's bicentenary, unfortunately.

Tecumseh said...

Just hang in there till then, willya? At any rate, why not visit Paris? You ever been there. Beats those dreary, dank Deutsch burgs.

Mr roT said...

Paris: People smell terrible, Tecs! I told ya!

Hannover. Love dank towns if they're full of biergarten!

But wtf's going on with these langsam elektronen in the Net? Jeez, it's like 20 minutes to upload a brilliant comment rehashing your views on the Balkan War.

Tecumseh said...

Electrons hate you. Face it.