larry
10/16/2017 04:02:10 pm
Philo was a great inventor. He learned the new technology from science books and magazines, and also came up with innovative ideas from his own experience. That led to his invention.
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Justin
10/16/2017 05:26:22 pm
Phil always wanted to invent something nobody has and was very inspired by inventions.
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Josh
12/21/2017 04:57:06 am
Phil always went poor had shoes for years and it did not stop him
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jishnu
10/17/2017 02:12:14 pm
It is so amazing that Philo thought about how you could make TV using parallel lines that get scanned by light I would probably think it was just lines.
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Josh
10/19/2017 04:34:31 pm
its so insprationl how head had no money no and it didnt stop him from his invetion
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Caroline Leiter #FLYERS
10/17/2017 04:29:35 pm
I wonder how he was able to invent the TV when "professional" scientists started before him and still couldn't invent it before him?
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Jake B
10/18/2017 03:57:46 pm
Its amazing how someone could think of this out of nature. and, philo was a 14-year old too! philo must be a very smart kid.
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Caroline B.
10/25/2017 03:24:36 pm
It is so crazy that a kid was able to see the T.V. on a field when he was going his choirs. Theses amazing scientist could not understand how to create it, but then in comes a kid who is so interested in science and creates an invention that changes the world and the future.
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Parth
11/15/2017 04:45:07 pm
Philo T. Farnsworth was an American inventor best known as a pioneer of television technology. Born in Beaver, Utah, on August 19, 1906, Philo T. Farnsworth was a talented scientist and inventor from a young age. In 1938, he had a prototype of the first all-electric television. Philo Taylor Farnsworth was born on August 19, 1906, in Beaver, Utah. Farnsworth sketched out an idea for a vacuum tube that would revolutionize television. Farnsworth converted his family's home appliances to electric power during his high school years and won a national contest. He was forced to drop out when his father died 2 years after. By 1926, he moved to San Francisco with his new wife, Elma "Pem" Gardner Farnsworth. Philo told his idea to make television to a couple of bussnissmen and they bought. He died of pneumonia on March 11, 1971, in Salt Lake City, Utah.
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Caroline B.
12/29/2017 03:18:12 pm
This kid Philo had so much success as a kid and even more as an adult. He set his mind to his future. He was able to understand the things most people and smart people could not understand as a kid. He learned by taking things apart and placing the piece back where they belong. People may say "I wish I could be like this kid" and guess what they can be if they try and work hard because hard work pays off!
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Shriyan
5/2/2018 06:39:43 pm
i red the post and the book in wonder.I learned that if you have a invention you use a patent to save you invention so one one can steal it.
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