Name at birth: Philo Taylor Farnsworth
Philo T. Farnsworth is now known as the inventor who didn't get enough credit for devising the first all-electronic television. Largely self-educated, Farnsworth grew up on farms in Utah and Idaho. As a boy he took an interest in electricity and electrons, and it's said he came up with the idea of electronically scanning images for transmission while he was in high school. He studied at Brigham Young University for two years (1923-25), but family responsibilities cut his college career short. With funding from friends and associates, Farnsworth moved to California to work on his dream of an electronic television system (earlier inventions had relied on mechanical parts). In 1927, at his lab in San Francisco, Farnsworth's "Image Dissector" transmitted the first electronic television image -- a straight line -- to a charged screen. Farnsworth spent the next decade arguing over patent rights in legal battles with http://www.answers.com/main/ntq-dsid-1648-dekey-davidsarnoff and engineer Vladimir Zworykin of RCA. In 1934 the U.S. Patent Office sided with Farnsworth, and in 1939 he sold his various patents to RCA. Although Farnsworth was awarded more than a hundred patents related to television, he did not become famous as "the inventor of television." Now it is generally agreed that the development of television involved many individuals, but it is also the consensus that Farnsworth deserves the lion's share of the credit.
Philo T. Farnsworth went to college at BRIGHAN YOUNG UNIVERSITY.
philo Taylor farnsworth is on the Google images go look it up
Philo T Farnsworth III is the son of Philo T Farnsworth who invented television. He was born on Sept. 23, 1929. He was an industrial designer.
Philo Farnsworth went to Brigham Young High School and graduated from the school in 1924. He was the inventor of the television.
Philo Farnsworth attended elementary school in Beaver, Utah. He later moved to Rigby, Idaho, where he continued his education. His early experiences in these small towns contributed to his inventive spirit, which eventually led to his pivotal role in the development of television technology.
Philo Judaeus went by Philo of Alexandria.
Ryan Farnsworth goes by Farns.
He didn't go to college
http://wrigleyville23.com/2007/04/get-your-farnsworth-video-here.html
He went to college in 1916
2 year community college
go to college and get a degree