Chatham Marconi Maritime Center's museum traces the storied history of maritime wireless communication in Chatham from 1914 throughout the 20th Century. Housed in the historic former Marconi/RCA ...
Situated on a barren and lonely headland of the coast of Galway, three miles from the town of Clifden, is the Irish station of the Marconi transatlantic wireless telegraph system. No less barren ...
She boasted the latest in propulsion and navigation technology and an innovation that had only recently available: a Marconi wireless room, used both for ship-to-shore and ship-to-ship communications.
During the ship's sinking, wireless operator Jack Phillips sent out a 'CQD' message to ships nearby - a precursor to the 'SOS' signal now used. Mr Philips, a Marconi Company employee, went down ...
The film also touches on the career of: Guglielmo Marconi (1874-1937), the Italian-born inventor of "Wireless" telegraphy. In 1896 Marconi took out a patent on his unique system to transmit the ...
In November 1916, E.J. Nally, vice president of the American division of the Marconi Wireless Telegraph Company, received an unusual memo from one of his young assistants. The memo depicted a ...
Guglielmo Marconi sent radio signals for the first ... A council spokesman said: “The artwork celebrates the world’s first ...
[Thomas] picked up a Marconi TF1245 with dents and dings. We have to admit that we had not heard of a “circuit magnification meter,” but apparently, this was a thing in the late 1960s and ...
(2) A network device that supports multiple switching and routing protocols. For example, Marconi's BXR-48000 switch-router is an IP router, MPLS switch and ATM switch that can support all three ...
M. S. Republic. However, the Republic collided with an Italian ship off the Nantucket coast. This incident marked the first use of the Marconi wireless communication, or the telegraph, and was ...