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Guglielmo Marconi patents the first radio device, considered the foundation for modern radio.
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Nikola Tesla is granted a U.S. patent for a "system of transmitting electrical energy" and another patent for "an electrical transmitter"—both the products of his years of development in transmitting and receiving radio signals. These patents would be challenged and upheld (1903), reversed (1904), and finally restored (1943).
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Marconi transmits the first transatlantic radio signal, sending a message from Cornwall, England to Newfoundland.
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Radio alternator designed it produce high-frequency alternating current (AC) used in early radio transmission, particularly for sending Morse code and, in some cases, voice and music
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triode invented by Lee De Forest and it made amplified radio technology possible
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The Radio Act of 1912 assigns three- and four-letter codes to radio stations and limits broadcasting to the 360m wavelength, which jams signals.
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November 2: KDKA radio station in Pittsburgh broadcasts the first commercial radio program, covering the presidential election.
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Reacting to problems posed by the Radio Act of 1912, the Commerce Department allows powerful stations to use the 400m wavelength as long as they only broadcast live music.
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The first radio broadcast from a Vermont location originated at the University of Vermont’s station WCAX on October 10, 1924.