| ▲ | gcanyon 8 hours ago | |||||||
The interesting question (to me) is how directly a line can be drawn from the original invention to what we in modern times think of as “the thing”? As an example, the Wright brothers built a biplane that had wing warping instead of ailerons and a canard design. That bears little resemblance to most modern airplanes, but people have little trouble crediting it as “the invention of the airplane” —- questions of whether the Wrights were first or not notwithstanding. Can ”TV” be thus simplified so that an electromechanical device with spinning discs qualifies? | ||||||||
| ▲ | WalterBright 7 hours ago | parent [-] | |||||||
The invention of the "airplane" is just a simplified term for "controlled and sustained powered flight". Which the Wrights did with both controlled and powered in the 1903 Flyer. (The Wrights invented the first 3-axis control system, and designed & built the first aviation engine capable of sustained flight.) While the Wrights were first, by several years, its invention was inevitable. | ||||||||
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