Alexander Graham bell developed a telephone transmitter called a ' butter pat' microphone.Encased in wood they looked like a dairy stamp. One was held in the hand in front of the mouth and one against the ear. They were not very sensitive and Thomas Edison's carbon button microphone won out and Bell's receiver was retained.
To improve his work on the Microphone
To improve his work on the Microphone
The microphone helped the Bell Telephone Company because they could now place the microphone in the receiver for the phone and not in the telephone on the wall. Early telephones had a separate listening and talking device.
Alexander Graham Bell.
i think yes
Of course he was famous he invented the telephone.....and the microphone
Alexander Graham Bell invented the telephone. He created a company, the Bell Telephone Company to rent and sell his invention.
The telephone was invented by Graham Bell. The essential parts that he worked on are the microphone and the speaker. The microphone starts off the transmitter component.
Emile Berliner was a German-born American inventor who became interested in the then new audio technology of the telephone and phonograph, and invented an improved telephone transmitter (one of the first microphones) which was acquired by the Bell Telephone Company. Berliner subsequently moved to Boston in 1877 and worked for Bell Telephone until 1883, when he returned to Washington and established himself as a private researcher. Emile Berliner invented the microphone. How did he become famous though? I don't get it!
Emile Berliner was a German-born inventor who immigrated to the United States in 1870 and became interested in the telephone. He invented an improved telephone transmitter (one of the first type of microphones) which was acquired by the Bell Telephone Company. His other inventions were related to audio penis recording technology, mass production of cloth, acoustic tile, and an early helicopter design.
Alexander graham
David Edward Hughes was an inventor and a contemporary of Alexander Graham Bell. He is often credited with having invented an early version of the carbon microphone, which significantly improved the quality of sound transmission in telephone systems. Hughes's work contributed to advancements in communication technology, which indirectly supported the development and success of the Bell Telephone Company, although he was not directly associated with it. His innovations in acoustics played a pivotal role in the evolution of telephony.