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wireless

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Captioned

Marconi lecture 2018: Imperial Wave: how empire shaped the network of wireless in South Asia at the turn of the twentieth century

Dr Medha Saxena (Delhi, and Byrne Bussey Marconi Fellow), gives the 2018 annual Marconi lecture.
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What happened to wireless?

Jacob Ward, Bodleian Libraries Byrne-Bussey Marconi Fellow, Department of Science and Technology Studies, UCL, gives the 2018 Marconi lecture.
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Marconi and media history

Dr Noah Arceneaux, Associate Professor, School of Journalism and Media Studies, San Diego State University, Byrne-Bussey Marconi Visiting Fellow 2016-17, Bodleian Library, talks about the history of wireless broadcasting and the Bodleian Marconi Archive.
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Research business and the shortwave beam: Marconi and the uses of wireless in postwar years

Giovanni Paoloni discusses the influence of the development of the shortwave beam technology on Marconi and the Marconi Company
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Marconi's early Latin projects over the South-Atlantic

Ines Queiroz explores how technical constraints have shaped strategies for wireless networks development
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Ether and Wireless: an Old Medium into New Media

Jaume Navarro (Byrne-Bussey Marconi Fellow, 2013) talks about the influence of the idea of the 'ether', an all-pervading substance, in the history of wireless communication.
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Wireless Communications during the Titanic Disaster

Michael Hughes (Bodleian Libraries) gives a talk about the final wireless communications from the Titanic.
The History of Science Museum

Interview: Peter Scott on Marconi and Radio Manufacturing

Professor Peter Scott discusses his research into competitive advantage and innovation in the interwar British radio industry using the Marconi Archive, Britain's most extensive and important archive for the radio and related industries.
The History of Science Museum

Radio Manufacturing in the Interwar Years

Professor Peter Scott (University of Reading) presents the inaugural Douglas Byrne Marconi Lecture based on his research on Marconi and radio manufacturing between the World Wars.

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