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This Day in Geek History: March 19

Mar 19 2008 No Comment  1,941 views

1474
The Republic of Venice passes the Venetian Patent Statute, the first patent law of its kind in the world. It declares that “each person who will make in this city any new and ingenious contrivance, not made heretofore in our dominion, as soon as it is reduced to perfection… It being forbidden to any other in any territory and place of ours to make any other contrivance in the form and resemblance thereof, without the consent and licence of the author up to ten years.” The law is intended to stimulate the economy by attracting inventors to Venice.

1800
An Electric EelAlexander von Humoldt and Aimé Bonpland capture the first specimen of Electric eels (Electrophorus electricus) during a five-year expedition through the jungles of South America. Humboldt will later write about his discovery in an article entitled, “Observation on the Electric Eel of the New World” in 1808.

1831
The City Bank of New York becomes the site of the first bank robbery in United States history. Approximately US$245,000 is stolen and only a small portion of the money will ever be recovered.

1915
The planet Pluto is photographed for the first time, though it isn’t recognized as a planet.

1921
The silent film The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari, directed by Robert Wiene, is released to US theaters. The film will strongly influence many future directors, most notably Tim Burton. The film tells the story of the mysterious Dr. Caligari, a hypnotist, his faithful sleepwalking Cesare, and their connection to a string of murders in the German mountain village of Holstenwall. Read more about The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari. IMDB listing Running Time: 1 hr 12 min
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This Day in Geek History: March 18

Mar 18 2008 No Comment  390 views

1952
A patent for the Electrical Integration Circuit is issued to William “Willy” A. Higinbotham. (No. 2,589,807) The circuit was conceived in the early forties for the Eagle radar bombsight.

1953
MGM, which has been working on its own wide-screen system, becomes the first studio to adopt CinemaScope. So as to create an industry standard and justify exhibitors’ commitment of investment in equipment, other major studios agree to adopt the Fox system as standard. Warner Bros will join later in the year after the release of The Robe but Paramount prefers to back developments in 3D.

1954
RKOHoward Hughes buys RKO Pictures for US$23,489,478.

1955
The initial trial installation of electronic switching for Morris, Illinois is announced. Recorded announcements of disconnects and changed numbers will be used in some small dial offices.
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This Day in Geek History: March 17

Mar 17 2008 No Comment  854 views

The Phantascope1799
Étienne Gaspard Robertson is granted a patent for his Phantascope magic lantern. The device incorporates a mechanism to maintain focus while the image is tracked forward and backward to change an image’s size.

1845
Stephen Perry of the rubber manufacturing company Messers Perry and Co. of London, England first patents the rubber band. He conceived of the device after experimentally slicing up rubber bottles that had been manufactured by South and Central America natives and brought to England by sailors.

1898
John Philip Holland demonstrates the first practical submarine off Staten Island, New York. The ship remains submerged for one hundred minutes.

1950
Scientists at the University of California at Berkeley announce the discovery of radioactive element 98, “Californium.” It was produced by bombarding Curium-242 with Helium-ions.
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This Day in Geek History: March 16

Mar 16 2008 1 Comment  451 views

1867
Joseph Lister publishes an article on his discovery of antiseptic surgery in the medical journal The Lancet. The article is the first of a series in which Lister applies Pasteur’s theory that the micro-organisms which cause gangrene might be inhibited chemically. In the articles, he details his successful use of phenol (carbolic acid) on medical instruments, surgical incisions, and wound dressings to reduce infections.

1919
The wireless telephone is invented, enabling pilots to communicate in flight.

1926
Robert Goddard and rocketRobert Goddard launches the first US liquid-fuel rocket in a field in Auburn, Massachusetts. The rocket is an experimental model of Goddard’s own design which places the rocket ahead of its fuel tank, shielded from flame by a metal cone. The design is intended to provide the rocket with greater stability, but it failed to function as it was intended to.

1942
The first V-2 rocket is tested, but it explodes on liftoff. A V-2 will eventually become the first man-made object to make a sub-orbital spaceflight.
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This Day in Geek History: March 15

Mar 15 2008 1 Comment  516 views

1493
Christopher Columbus returns to Spain from his first voyage to the new world, which began on August 3, 1492. The return comes after spending a week in Portugal, where his ship had been blown by a storm during the return trip.

1915
The English Divisional Court of Appeal rules in the case of Ellis v North Metropolitan Theatres Ltd. that local authorities do not have the right to ban cinema exhibitions on Sundays.

1959
At Brookhaven National Laboratory in Upton, New York, the first US atomic reactor built specifically for medical research, the Brookhaven Medical Research Reactor (BMRR), reaches criticality. The reactor will be decommissioned in December 2000.

1960
The National Observatory at Kitt Peak, Arizona is dedicated. Housing twenty-three telescopes, it is the largest and most diverse gathering of astronomical instruments in the world. Visit the official Kitt Peak National Observatory website.

1963
The International Business Machines (IBM) Data Processing Division (DPD) introduces the IBM 1050 data communications system. Visit the official IBM website.
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This Day in Geek History: March 14

Mar 14 2008 4 Comments  484 views

Happy White Day

Today is White Day in Japan and Korea, a holiday similar to Valentine’s Day, in which men give gifts to women. It is also Pi Day, an International celebration of the mathematical constant, Pi.

1794
Eli Whitney patents the Cotton Gin, a mechanism to separate cotton seeds from the plant’s usable fiber. Before the Cotton Gin, removing seeds from cotton was a task largely accomplished by slave labor. The invention, which makes it possible for a single person to clean fifty pounds of cotton in a day, will revolutionize the textile industry and significantly decrease the demand for slave labor in the US.

1839
Sir John Herschel uses the word “photography” for the first time in history during a lecture given to the Royal Society in London.

1891
The construction of the first submarine telephone cable across the English Channel is completed.

1915
The first issue of the Sunday Pictorial, the first newspaper to make extensive use of photography, is launched in the UK.
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This Day in Geek History: March 13

Mar 13 2008 1 Comment  2,124 views

Uranus1781
William Herschel discovers the planet Uranus, but mistakes it for a comet. It is the first planet discovered with the aid of a telescope. By 1787, Herschel will also discover the Uranian satellites Titania and Oberon (Jan 11, 1787), which are later named by his son, John Herschel.

1882
ZoopraxiscopeThe zoopraxiscope, an optical apparatus invented by Eadweard J. Muybridge to exhibit photographs of moving animals, is demonstrated at the Royal Institution to the Prince of Wales. The zoopraxiscope projects images from rotating glass disks in rapid succession to give the impression of motion. It is essentially the first movie projector, with a sequence of stop-motion silhouette images hand-painted around the edge of a circular glass disk, which is then loaded onto the projector’s side vertically position. In 1893, Muybridge will present his invention at “Zoopraxigraphical Hall” during the World’s Columbian Exposition in Chicago.
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This Day in Geek History: March 12

Mar 12 2008 2 Comments  444 views

1884
The state of Mississippi approves the first state-supported college for women, the Mississippi Industrial Institute and College.

1889
Almon Brown Strowger files a patent for an automatic telephone system. The system is functional, and it will be installed in the town of Laporte, Indiana in 1892, but the system patented by Alexander Graham Bell in 1876 will beat out Stowger’s patent in terms of popularity.

1894
Coca-Cola BottleAtlanta pharmacist Dr. John Pemberton sells the first bottles of his tonic, Coca-Cola. He created the liquid in his backyard from a combination of cinnamon, coca leaves, lime, and kola nuts brewed in a brass kettle in an attempt to find an alternative to alcoholic beverages during prohibition. He markets the formula as a brain and nerve tonic for medical use, but he’ll later add carbonated water and sell it as a beverage.

1907
German engineer Alfred Maul is issued a patent for a camera-carrying space rocket. It can carry photography equipment and scientific instruments and return safely. Maul is the same engineer who in 1904, successfully took aerial photographs of the ground from a height of 600 meters (2,000 ft.) by attaching cameras to a black powder rocket, thereby creating the first instrumented sounding rocket.
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