Did Marconi invented radio...?


TESLA'S FIRST VIABLE RADIO CIRCUIT IN 1893

UPHELD BY THE SUPREME COURT

Tesla's four-tuned circuits (two on the receiving side and two on the transmitting side, secured by U.S. patents #645,576 and #649,621) were the basis of the U.S. Supreme Court decision (Case #369 decided June 21, 1943) to overturn Marconi's basic patent on the invention of radio.

Marconi merely demonstrated Tesla's invention, but the gullible media and the greedy industry that followed continue to perpetuate a myth that Marconi invented radio. Who do you believe has more credibility...industries promoting their own businesses, or the U.S. Supreme Court?

Marconi's two-tuned circuit system was the same as that advanced by Heinrich Hertz and was no more a viable system of radio than that advanced by Mahlon Loomis in 1872...long before Hertz or Tesla. In one of my pages I tell the complete story in legal and technical terms. Any unbiased reader should understand that it was Maxwell, Hertz, and Tesla who were the actual pioneers of radio. Marconi only helped develop radio after it was invented. Mr. Edison and Mr. Marconi's popularity in history is just another example of historians promoting entrepreneurs and technologists over the actual discoverers.
eldragon

...you asked for something? And my posts? If you do not like it it means that your balls are tangled in your shorts and it's cutting off the blood supply to your brain.
Several years before anyone succeeded in communicating via "radio", a brilliant Scottish physicist named James Clerk Maxwell predicted, using mathematics, that it would be possible to send information through space without wires.
Stay up all night Dragon thinking that one up.Real class act you are.This is a great place comments like your are for gutter rats.
In an episode of "Sopranos" they speak on this, and similar topics from the "Italian"point of view.....And the Warren Commission was right also.?
In 1966, as a high school freshman I pored over microfiche of early Scientific Americans and wrote a paper on Nathan B Stubblefield, who first communicated "wireless" using inductionfields, near the Potomac well before Marconi.
His work was ignored, but interestingly similar systems are used to communicate traffic info, etc., to your car radio in tunnels, for example. He became en embittered recluse, and died of starvation in the Tennesee hills. Phew!