We use Optical Character Recognition (OCR) during our scanning and processing workflow to make the content of each page searchable. You can view the automatically generated text below as well as copy and paste individual pieces of text to quote in your own work.
Text recognition is never 100% accurate. Many parts of the scanned page may not be reflected in the OCR text output, including: images, page layout, certain fonts or handwriting.
40
INTERNATIONAL PROJECTIONIST
November 1931
What does Television mean to You?
H
.ERE is a new book that gives all the facts about this new and amazing offspring of radio. Avoiding technical terms it follows the development of television right up to date, explains principles, methods and apparatus, and weighs for you the problems, possibilities and probabilities of television as a conunercial tool and a form of entertainment.
Just Published
TELEVISION
by EDGAR H. FELIX
Radio Consultant 276 pages, 5^x8, illustrated, $2.50
HAS television arrived at last? Can present broadcasting and receiving equipment be adapted to television? Will television of the future come by air or wire? This book from beginning to end was written expressly to supply reliable answers to these and hundreds of other questions yon may have asked regarding television. With many explanatory illustrations and diagrams it gives a thorough background of technical facts — then makes plain their importance from the standpoint of the experimenter, the commercial operator, the broadcaster, the "listener-in."
Order from
INTERNATIONAL PROJECTIONIST
1 West 47th Street New York, N. Y,
Cavers television topics such as:
—has Television really arrive J ? •^lie BOW and WHY of Television. — ansolved problems of Television, •—possibilities of 100-line system, —latest synchronizing methods. ^— the human eye in Television, ""-will fntnre programs come by air
or wire? «»new developments affecting receiver
design, -^^utnre progress of Television.
24 experts explain
sound-recording
and projection
HERE is a book needed by every man connected with the practical side of the talking picture indtistry, in theatre or studio. Written by the men who taught the screen to talk it covers every phase, both technical and practical, of sound recording and reproduction.
Recording Sound for Motion Pictures
Published for the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences
Edited by Lester Cowan
404 pages, 6x9, 229 illiistrations, $5.00
Answers many
questions on:
— practical technique of recording — booms, blimps and microphones — recording systems — film laboratories — assembling the talking picture — reproducing systems — practice and problems of sound projection
TWENTY-four sections, each written by a recognized authority and specialist in his field, present an authoritative description and explanation of the fundamental principles involved in recording and reproducing sound for motion pictures and their practical application in the studio, on location and in the theatre. Everything essential or important is covered, from the fundamental nature of sound, down to the practical aspects of volume control, theatre acoustics, and other everyday problems of sound projection.
Order frona
INTERNATIONAL
1 West 47th St.
PROJECTIONIST
New York, N. Y