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Blaupunkt GmbH (listen ⓘ) was a German manufacturer, producing mostly car-audio gear and other electronic equipment. Owned by Robert Bosch GmbH from 1933 until 1 March 2009, it was sold to Aurelius AG of Germany.
The content and layout of the original colour circle pattern was designed by Danish engineer Finn Hendil (1939–2011) [1] in the Philips TV & Test Equipment laboratory in Amager (moved to Brøndby Municipality in 1989) near Copenhagen under supervision of chief engineer Erik Helmer Nielsen in 1966–67, largely building on their previous work ...
[3]: §CEC-3.1 For example, a TV remote can also control a digital video recorder and a Blu-ray player. It is a single-wire bidirectional serial bus that is based on the CENELEC standard AV.link protocol to perform remote control functions. [4] CEC wiring is mandatory, although implementation of CEC in a product is optional.
A typical modern set-top box, along with its remote control - pictured here a digital terrestrial TV receiver by TEAC. A set-top box (STB), also known as a cable box, receiver, or simply box, and historically television decoder or a converter, [1] is an information appliance device that generally contains a TV tuner input and displays output to a television set, turning the source signal into ...
The Fernseh AG television company was registered in Berlin on July 3, 1929, by John Logie Baird, Robert Bosch, Zeiss Ikon and D.S. Loewe as partners. John Baird owned Baird Television Ltd. in London, Zeiss Ikon was a camera company in Dresden, D.S. Loewe owned a company in Berlin and Robert Bosch owned a company, Robert Bosch GmbH, in Stuttgart.
441-line is the number of scan lines in some early electronic monochrome analog television systems.Systems with this number of lines were used with 25 interlaced frames per second in France from 1937 to 1956, [1] Germany from 1939 to 1943, [2] [3] Italy from 1939 [1] to 1940, Japan in 1939, [4] as well as by RCA in the United States with 30 interlaced frames per second from 1938 to 1941.
Prior to World War I, the company set up the first world-wide network of communications [1] and was the first in the world to sell electronic televisions with cathode-ray tubes, in Germany in 1934. [2] [3] The brand had several incarnations:
Bosch entered India in 1922, when Illies & Company set up a sales office in Calcutta. For three decades, the company operated in the Indian market only through imports. In 1951, the Motor Industries Company Ltd. (MICO) was founded, with Bosch instantly buying 49% of its stock.