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  1. Kenjiro Takayanagi (高柳 健次郎, Takayanagi Kenjirō, January 20, 1899 in Hamamatsu, Shizuoka – July 23, 1990 in Yokosuka) was a Japanese engineer and a pioneer in the development of television. [1]

  2. He was Dr. Kenjiro Takayanagi (1899 - 1990) and a graduate of the Tokyo Institute of Technology. Invited to the NHK (Japan Broadcasting Corporation) Technology Research Center, he led experimental television broadcasting to success in 1940.

  3. Professor Kenjiro Takayanagi started his research program in television at Hamamatsu Technical College (now Shizuoka University) in 1924. He transmitted an image of the Japanese character イ(i) on a cathode-ray tube on 25 December 1926 and broadcast video over an electronic television system in 1935.

  4. Kenjiro Takayanagi: The Father of Japanese Television. 1.1 Kenjiro Takayanagi among the World's Premier Innovators. In Japan, Hamamatsu Industrial High School, Waseda University, and...

  5. Jul 25, 1990 · Kenjiro Takayanagi, known as the father of Japanese television, died of pneumonia on Monday in a hospital in Yokosuka, company officials said today. He was 91 years old.

  6. Dec 13, 2022 · In 1924, Kenjiro Takayanagi became an assistant professor at the Hamamatsu Higher Technical School (now Shizuoka Universitys Department of Engineering). He engaged in the study of “wireless distance vision”, which led to the developmental research of television in Japan.

  7. 1926年世界で最初に電子式テレビジョンの開発に成功した高柳健次郎博士18991990年です。 1940年にはNHK(日本放送協会)技術研究所のチームを率い、テレビの実験放送に成功。 第二次世界大戦後も日本のテレビ開発を指揮し、1953年のテレビ放送開始や日本初のテレビ開発、VTRやビデオディスクの開発にも関わりました。 20世紀に生まれた最大のメディア「テレビ」のハードとプラットフォームを創った高柳博士。 同氏が通信の世界に興味を持ち、偉業を達成するに至るまでの物語を、本学でメディア論の研究を行う柳瀬博一教授(リベラルアーツ研究教育院)が紹介します。 20世紀最大のメディア出現の舞台裏にいた、東工大OB.

  8. Professor Kenjiro Takayanagi is one of the pioneers for the development of television. He achieved most of his work independently of activities in Europe and United States of America because at the time, global communications were poor.

  9. Jul 25, 1990 · Kenjiro Takayanagi, 91, considered the father of Japanese television. An electrical engineer, Takayanagi achieved the first television transmission in Japan in 1926 and developed the...

  10. Many European engineers began research on television technology after Beard of England transmitted moving pictures by cable. In 1935, Kenjiro Takayanagi at Hamamatsu Vocational College built a functioning iconoscope, which was a major step in development of an actual product.