Invention of the telephone: Think if there was no telephone? The world would be lost in distance. Separation deepens. The distance is length. Humanity would just remain Chindi Chindi. But on this day (March 10), exactly 149 years ago, an incident changed everything. Then 29-year-old Alexander Graham Bell invented the telephone. His rhyme collided. Turra in his hat has been engaged since then. Ekda said to a friend holding the other end in a separate room holding one end of the wire: “Watson I want to meet.” Watson came in a few moments and repeated every word that he had heard. Just the telephone incarnated. That was the first form of today’s mobile. Graham Bel’s compulsion was that her mother and daughter were deaf. As a speech doctor, Graham used to try to talk to Bel Bahr by signs. This was the mother of this emergency invention.
Graham established “Bell Company”. The journey went for miles. Found a patent. But the US law officials created hurdles. Finally, success was found. Graham Bell, who became a graduate at the age of thirteen, also became a famous music teacher after three years. That is, the master of sound, speech and communication. He also made far -reaching and beneficial inventions in communication technology. It is called the father of communication revolution. He used to pity on the deaf. He was fond of him. Reason ? His mother, wife and close friend were all suffering from ear disability. But Graham Bell did not let the disability become a curse. Telecommunications are the results of the same.
Metal detector discovery
Graham Bell is also credited with the invention of not only telephone, but also optical-fiber systems, photos, bail and desibl unit, metal-detector etc. All these are based on such technology, without which communication-scrutiny cannot be imagined. Alexander Graham Bell might not have been aware when his second discovery of that time is going to be an effective tool in fighting other types of crimes including terrorism in the coming time. Police is very effective in the investigation today. After the discovery of the telephone, Bell strived to improve it and in 1915 spoke through a distance of thousands of kilometers via telephone. “New York Times” published its details, giving great prominence to the incident. In this, Bell, who was sitting in New York, had a conversation with his colleague Watson, sitting in Sanfrancisco. His personal experiences were also influenced by his various discoveries. For example, when his newborn son died due to respiratory problems, he prepared a metal vacuum jacket which made it easier to breathe. His device was very popular till 1950 and was further improved in later days. Seeing many people around him having difficulty speaking and listening, he also paid his attention in this direction and discovered the audiometer to assess the problem of listening. Apart from various areas, he also worked towards making alternative energy and sea water sweet.
18 patents are recorded
According to Carlot Gray, a biography of Graham Bell, Bell has 18 patents. Apart from this, 12 patents are recorded with his colleagues. These patents include telephones, photos, phones and telegraphs. He also created a device to detect iceberg. Which provided special help to the sailors who traveled to the sea travel, especially in extremely cold regions.
Often from the journalist perspective, we think that if Graham Bel had not invented, the media would have been disabled. The same question was the same question, my mechanical engineer daughter (Executive Director of National Heritage Department in Railway Board) Vinita asked me years ago: “If Dad had not been Graham Bell?” My stubborn answer was: “Today the global media remains dumb.” But it is natural for every journalist to see the continuous development in the communication revolution. Salute to Alexander Graham Bell. Professionally, two cartoons related to telephone are missed. Showed in one: The answer to the lifter from the other end was: “The wrong number is.” So the caller asked: “Why did you pick up?” (New York Time Cartoon: 5 June 1937). The second is from the famous cartoon magazine “Panch” (London). Husband shouts at the wife holding Choga: “Who wipes the dust of this table? I wrote a number note on it. ” The relationship of phone and newspaper is ancient, unbreakable. Even today.
K Vikram Rao
Mobile: 9415000909
E-mail: k.vikramrao@gmail.com