German TV Market: The German TV market always occupies an important part of the country's cable network business, and in recent years network business has been generating enormous profits. In fact, the digital TV market accounts for over 70% of cable network operators. This is usually predicted. There are three major growth factors in the nationwide cable TV market: digital pay TV, telephone, and the Internet. Since pay-TV revenues are steadily growing, the Internet has played an important role in the German television market.
1884: Paul Gottlieb Nipkow (1860-1940), college student in Germany, patent (German patent # 30105), used in the concept of television and television system. This system was used as the foundation of the experiment of television from the 1920's to the early 1930's and used a rotary scanning disk (called a Nipkow disk) with a series of 30 holes in which patterns are aligned from the end of the disk towards the center of the spiral did. No prototype of his scanning device has been made. 1926: Scottish inventor John Rosy Baird (1888-1946) used a rotating nipko disc to create a detailed description (30 rows resolution) at London Institute I sent a video to my receiver. This experiment is considered to be the first demonstration of a practical electromechanical television system.
Mechanical TV was sold in the United Kingdom, the United States, the Soviet Union from 1928 to 1934. Baird's earliest commercial television sold in the UK in 1928, called Televisors, added a television device consisting of a neon tube behind a mechanical rotating disk (acquired by German engineer Paul Nipkow in 1884) it was done). First of all, the manufacture of television with spiral holes in mass production, sales of about 1000 units. The first commercial electronic television with CRT was manufactured by German Telefunken in 1934, followed by other manufacturers in France (1936), UK (1936) and USA (1938). The cheapest 12 inch (30 cm) screen model is $ 445 (equivalent to $ 7,736 in 2017). Prior to the Second World War, it was estimated that 19,000 electronic televisions were manufactured in the UK and about 1,600 electronic televisions were manufactured in Germany.