Industrial-Revolution - DEIMOS

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Industrial Age

Industrial Age
Industrial age A period in history that
encompasses the changes in economic and
social organization that began around 1760
in Great Britain and later in other countries.
Characterized chiefly by the substitution of
hand tools with power driven machines
(power loan and steam engine) and by the
concentration of industry in large
establishments.
Industrial Age
The steam engine, machine using steam
power to perform mechanical work
through the agency of heat.

Steam engine
Inventor and His Steam Engine

James watta Steam engine


Printing press
The industrial printing press was one of the
most influential inventions of the Age of
Revolution. It allowed thousands of copies of
all types of written texts and images to be
printed quickly and cheaply.
Johannes Gutenberg
Newspaper - The London Gazette

The London Gazette is one of the


official journals of record of the
British government, and the most
important among such official
journals in the United Kingdom, in
which certain statutory notices are
required to be published.
This claim is also made by the Stamford Mercury and
Berrow’s Worcester Journal
Typewriter
The typewriter was invented by
Christopher Latham Sholes however
the first typewriter-like machine was
invented in 1771 by Henry Mill from
England, but was later developed by
the italian Pellegrino Turri. QWERTY
keyboard-layouts were made to slow
people down. Many commonly used
keys were placed in awkward places.
Telephone
During the American Industrial
Revolution, Alexander Graham Bell
invented the first functional
telephone in 1876. Shortly
thereafter, major cities across the
United States and Europe began to
install the revolutionary telephone
system.
Motion picture photography/projection
(1890)
The history of film technology traces the development
of film technology from the initial development of
“moving pictures” at the end of 19th century to the
present time. Motion pictures were initially exhibited
as a fairground novelty and developed into one of the
most important tools of communication and
entertainment in the 20th century.
Commercial motion pictures (1913)
The Kinetoscope is an early motion picture exhibition device. The
Kinetoscope was designed for films to be viewed by one individual at
a time through a peephole viewer window at the top of the device.
The Kinetoscope was not a movie projector, but introduced the basic
approach that would become the standard for all cinematic
projection before the advent of video, by creating the illusion of
movement by conveying a strip of perforated film bearing sequential
images over a light source with a high-speed shutter. A process using
roll film first described in a patent application submitted in France
and the U.S. by French inventor Louis Le Prince, the concept was also
used by U.S. inventor Thomas Edison in 1889, and subsequently
developed by his employee William Kennedy Laurie Dickson between
1889 and 1892.
Motion pictures with sound (1926)
A sound film is a motion picture with synchronized
sound, or sound technologically coupled to image, as
opposed to a silent film. The first known public
exhibition of projected sound films took place in Paris
in 1900, but decades passed before sound motion
pictures were made commercially practical. Reliable
synchronization was difficult to achieve with the early
sound-on-disc systems, and amplification and
recording quality were also inadequate. Innovations in
sound-on-film led to the first commercial screening of
short motion pictures using the technology, which took
place in 1923.
Telegraph
Telegraph
Developed in the 1830's to 1840's by
Samuel Morse and other inventors, the
telegraph revolutionized long-distance
communication. It worked by
transmitting electrical signals over a wire
laid between stations.
Samuel Morse
Punch cards
PUNCH CARD - Is a piece of stiff paper that holds
digital data represented by the presence or absence
of holes in predefined positions. Punch cards were
once common in data processing applications or to
directly control automated machinery. Punch cards
were widely used through much of the 20th century
in the data processing industry, where specialized
and increasingly complex unit record machines,
organized into semiautomatic data processing
system,used punched cards for data input, output
and storage. Many early digital computers used
punched cards as the primary medium for Input of
both computer programs and data.
Herman Hollerith
london gazettte
GROUP D

 Irish Jean Arcipe


 Christian Nick Brecio
 Tristan Edrick De Lara
 Princess Ruvy Mahinay
 May Claire Mata
 Jeff Cyrill Penas

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