The home of invention
12/16

TEL053-478-1402http://www.nvrc.rie.shizuoka.ac.jp/takayanagi11The Fujioka Collection, a private collection of televisions, including black and white televisions on legs. These are all in working order, and can be used to view modern television. This collection also displays the most modern, 3mm thick cutting-edge organic EL televisions, and is of great interest in that you can see the progress and changes in television technologies all in one place. ■Closed: Mondays, New Year holidays, University’s examination period ■Hours: 10:00̃16:00■Admission: Free ■Parking: 10 cars■Bookings: Groups require advance booking3-51 Johoku, Naka-ku, Hamamatsu 432-8(within Shizuoka University)Fujioka CollectionThe television, now an indispensable part of our daily lives. This mysterious device that shows you images from around the world in your living room is a bona fide Japanese invention, and it has its beginnings here in Hamamatsu. A Guinness book of records from that time is exhibited, in which is written "In 1926, Kenjiro Takayanagi succeeded in creating the first all-electronic television at his workplace at Hamamatsu Industrial High School (now the Faculty of Engineering at Shizuoka University), using a Nipkow disk for transmission, and a CRT for reception". He was the first among scientists around the world to achieve this. In the memorial hall, you can follow the research and footsteps of the "Father of television" who subsequently perfected electronic television and broadcast systems. This shows reproductions of the devices upon which he conducted his experiments. Be enthralled by manually turning a disk, and having a Japanese figure "i" shown simultaneously on the screen. Imagine the joy of Takayanagi and his staff when they successfully pulled off this world-first! One area of the floor also shows off items such as computers, mobile phones, and DVD players. Most of the electronics technologies here would not have come into existence if it were not for the invention of these three basic technologies – image capturing, transmission, and reception. If the experiment to show this letter had not succeeded, then the world of today would probably be a very different place. A green Japanese letter "i", heralding the birth of television. Takayanagi Memorial HallThe future starts now Opticsイ

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