1848
First railway bookstall is opened at the Euston station, in London by W.H. Smith.
1879
Thomas Edison patents the electric lamp.
1884
Greenwich Mean Time (GMT) is adopted universally at a meeting of the International Meridian Conference in Washington, DC. The International Date Line is then drawn up and the twenty-four time zones are created.
1887
Eleven years after the phone was invented, the first differentiation between day and night long distance rates goes into effect, with night rates in most, but not all, instances lower than day rates.
1929
Thomas A Edison Inc. discontinues production of phonographs and records in order to concentrate on manufacturing the more popular dictating machines and radio receivers.
1939
The first rabbit conceived by artificial insemination is exhibited in the US at the 12th Annual Graduate Fortnight at the New York Academy of Medicine. Dr. Gregory Pincus, an American biologist, removed an egg from the ovary of a female rabbit and fertilized it with a salt solution. The egg was then transferred to the uterus of a second rabbit, which functioned as an incubator. Dr. Pincus, of Clark University conducted his experiments at Harvard University.
1951
The British computer LEO I (Lyons Electronic Office I), built by J. Lyons and Co., first goes into operation. The computer, which is an adaptation of EDSAC (Electronic Delay Storage Automatic Calculator ), will be used by the company to run routine business applications.
1952
The United States successfully detonates the first large hydrogen bomb, codenamed “Mike,” in the Eniwetok Atoll of the Marshall Islands, three thousand miles west of Hawaii. The bomb has a yield of ten megatons, a force a thousand times more powerful than the bomb that destroyed Hiroshima, and when it explodes, it results in a fireball more than three miles across, completely obliterating Elugelab and leaving an underwater crater 6,240 feet wide and 164 feet deep where an island had once been. Eighty million tons of soil were kicked into the air by the blast. The “mushroom” cloud rose to 135,000 feet and will eventually spread to 1,000 miles in width. It is the first time fusion occurs on Earth.
1954
The Industrial Development Engineering Associates (IDEA) Corporation begins selling the first commercial transistor radio, the Regency (TR-1). The radio was designed and built by Texas Instruments, Inc. (TI). The radio uses a 22 ½ volt battery which outlives the two “B” or ten “A” batteries which are used in conventional vacuum tube portables. The first transistor radio produced is presented to Patrick Eugene Haggerty, vice president of TI, along with a certificate acknowledging him for his “vision, judgment and untiring efforts.” Price: US$49.95
1956
John Bardeen, Walter Brattain, and William Shockley are awarded the Nobel Prize for Physics for inventing the transistor.
1960
The first market trial of Touch Tone calling by AT&T, begins in Findlay, Ohio.
1962
The Soviet space probe Mars 1, which will later make the first successful flyby of Mars, is launched.
1968
The Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) rating system goes into effect with the G (general), M (mature), R (restricted, no unaccompanied children) and X (over 16 only) ratings. The system was introduced October 7, and the PG-13 and NC-17 will be introduced later.
1969
The third Interface Message Processor (IMP) node is installed at the University of California at Santa Barbara, establishing a third ARPANET node. The fourth node will be established at the University of Utah in December, and by 1971, fifteen nodes will be linked in total. Read more at UCLA.
1976
Paul Allen resigns from Micro Instrumentation and Telemetry Systems (MITS) to join Microsoft full time.
1977
Chiron, the farthest known asteroid is discovered by Charles T. Kowal. It will later be reclassified as a centaur, a type of planetoid.
1978
Microsoft establishes its first international sales office in Japan. Microsoft appoints ASCII Microsoft in Tokyo, which will later be known as Microsoft Japan, as its exclusive sales agent for the Far East. Kazuhiko Nishi, founder and publisher of Japan’s popular ASCII magazine, is appointed to organize the new operation.
1979
The Data Processing Division (DPD) of International Business Machines (IBM) announces two new models of the IBM 3033 processor, the Group N processors.
1981
November 1 is the last day of the first Atari Coin-Op US$50,000 World Championships held at the Chicago Expo Center. The event, managed by Tournament Games, Inc., has been a dismal failure. Somewhere between ten thousand and fifteen thousand coin-op players had been anticipated, but only 250 players actually participated. Eric Ginner won a US$12,000 cash prize for his US$60 entry fee and Ok-Soo Han won US$4,000 in cash and prizes. Among the contestants is actor Matthew Laborteaux who plays Albert on the television series Little House on the Prairie.
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