THE LOUD SPEAKER OF THE FUTURE.
“Tt, is to the loud-speaker that we mav look for popularity when onr-o the glamour of wireless lias passed atul when it has become a national service. Broadcasting in the luture will be real ; the voices will be so perfect that they will indeed lie difficult to distinguish from the original; the lack of that distinction only exists to-day-in the minds of the manufacturers. Pure broadcasting will lead to tho speaking film and .eventually to tho radio kinema where events are broadcost with sight and sound—l dare lint say with smell—front every part of the globe to us as we sit in our electricity warmed and carefully disinfected underground rooms. I will express no opinion as to the possibility of a broadcast- signal reaching any other planet than this earth; there are some who believe that beings from another world can he mentally telephoned to with relative ease, but I will content myself with the thought that ‘nothing is so difficult to define as the impossible.’ ’* —Professor A. AT. Low in the “Saturday Review.’’
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Hokitika Guardian, 18 March 1926, Page 3
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180THE LOUD SPEAKER OF THE FUTURE. Hokitika Guardian, 18 March 1926, Page 3
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