Boris Rosing

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Boris Lvovich Rosing (Russian: Бори́с Льво́вич Ро́зинг) (18691933) was a Russian scientist and inventor in the field of television. In 1907, he envisioned a TV system using the CRT on the receiving side. Rosing filed a patent application in Germany on November 26, 1907 and -- on the improved version of his system -- on March 2, 1911. He followed up with a demonstration of which a report was published in the Scientific American with diagrams and full description of the invention's operation.

Rosing's invention built on the work of Paul Nipkow and his spinning discs, and although it used a CRT, its operation was electromechanical instead of purely electronic (as all modern televisions derived from the Farnsworth invention are). Accordingly, Rosing's system employed a mechanical camera device, and a very early cathode ray tube (developed in Germany by Karl Ferdinand Braun) as a receiver. The system was primitive, but it was definitely one of the first experimental demonstrations where the cathode ray tube was employed for the purposes of television.

According to the generally established view V. K. Zworykin was a pupil of Rosing and assisted him in some of his laboratory work.

Rosing continued his television research until 1931 when he was exiled to Arkhangelsk by Joseph Stalin. Rosing died in exile in 1933.


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