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Sarnoff, David
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Sarnoff, David (1891–1971)

Belorussian-born US broadcasting pioneer, head of the Radio Corporation of America (RCA) from 1930. A telegraph operator for Marconi Wireless from 1906, he became commercial manager of the company when it was taken over by RCA in 1919. Named RCA president in 1930 and board chair in 1947, Sarnoff was an early promoter of television broadcasting during the 1940s and the first to manufacture colour sets and transmit colour programmes in the 1950s.

Born in Minsk (now in Belarus), Sarnoff immigrated with his family to New York in 1900. After studying electrical engineering at the Pratt Institute, he was hired by Marconi. In 1926 he founded the first radio network, the National Broadcasting Co. (NBC) as a broadcast subsidiary.



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Roebling, the first female governor of the American stock exchange; David Sarnoff, father of electronic communications; Wally Schirra, astronaut; Paul Volcker, former chairman of the Federal Reserve; and Alice Waters, influential chef.
00 Paperback Greenwood technographies TK6637 In this history of television, Magoun (executive director, David Sarnoff Library, David Sarnoff Research Center, Princeton) not only explains the development and basic workings of this technology, but also the processes, personalities, and business decisions involved, and TV's impact on American values.
Magoun (executive director, David Sarnoff Library), Television: The Life Story of a Technology lives up to its title with an in-depth examination of the history of a media that continues to transform the world.
 
 
 
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