TV age ENTRO
TV slash Computor age
On March 25, 1925, Scottish inventor John Logie Baird gave a demonstration of televised silhouette images in motion at Selfridge's Department Store in London. But if television is defined as the transmission of live, moving, half-tone (grayscale) images, and not silhouette, duotone, or still images, Baird first achieved this privately on October 2, 1925.[3] Then he gave the world's first public demonstration of a working television system to members of the Royal Institution and a newspaper reporter on January 26, 1926 at his laboratory in London. Unlike later electronic systems with several hundred lines of resolution, Baird's vertically scanned image, using a scanning disk embedded with a double spiral of lenses, had only 30 lines, just enough to reproduce a recognizable human face.
The first television set caused people to touch base
With there religion there they wondered at the image of the beast
Why was it so expensive to maintain and fixe
Some plantation owners in the south had one in the main house
But they refused to have them in the shanty towns
But now there portables and lap tops there they have them now
For no one is immune from images of my beast
666 is written on the European hidden models of the I.B.M
And the largest version of the ENIAC has this number written there 666.
The ENIAC was formally dedicated at the Moore School of Electrical Engineering of the University of Pennsylvania on February 15, 1946, and it was accepted by the U.S. Army Ordnance Corps in July, four years after the original suggestion by Dr. Mauchly.