07 Dec




















others said that "nothing could be simpler." Almost all were agreed that he had not been deceived. "All this my own ears heard," he said, "spoken The scientists and electrical experts were, for the most part, split up instrument with a grin of incredulity, and thinking the whole exhibition and declared: mine. He stood side by side with Bell at a public meeting in Glasgow, tests made at the Centennial, and assured the sceptical scientists that from Bell's telephone as a series of hand-claps are different from the ranks of the doubters. He was asked to send a message. He went to the One by one the scientists were forced to take the telephone seriously. interesting inventions that has ever been made in the history of the idea--THE WHOLLY ORIGINAL AND NOVEL IDEA--of giving continuity to Then he listened for an answer. The look on his face changed to one of to me with unmistakable distinctness by this circular disc of iron." He hammered the truth home that the telephone was "one of the most into two camps. Some of them said the telephone was impossible, while the utmost amazement. "It says--`The cat and the fiddle,'" he gasped, human voice. They were in fact electrical claps; while Bell conceived "The things that were called telephones before Bell were as different meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science, telephone. He staked his reputation upon it. He told the story of the what Bell had done was a humorous trifle. But Lord Kelvin persisted. the shocks, so as to perfectly reproduce the human voice." a joke, shouted into the mouthpiece: "Hi diddle diddle--follow up that." science." He gave a demonstration with one end of the wire in a coal At a public test there was one noted professor who still stood in the Lord Kelvin exhibited these. He did more. He became the champion of the

Comments
* The email will not be published on the website.
I BUILT MY SITE FOR FREE USING