Adventures in Dinosaur city
A TV remote? Probably not. TV remotes work via infra-red light. When you press a button, the command is sent to the TV through the infra-red light on the remote, which is picked up by an infra-red receiver on the front of the TV. Light cannot travel through walls. Infra-red extender systems are available to allow a remote in one room to operate equipment in another and can be purchased at AV dealers or on line. If you mean a remote for a racing car or something, then yes, because these work by radio waves, not infra-red light, which can pass through most walls, depending on the strength of the waves.
most remotes use infrared light (IR) more expensive remotes use radio frequency (RF) IR is shortrange and requires line of sight... think of it like a flashlight...you could bounce it off a mirror at the TV and it would get there, but if something is in the way the light gets blocked. RF is radio waves and can travel through walls and other objects...to operate devices in another room.
This will be different depending on your location. In most places the signal travels through cables, but in some remote areas satellites and dishes are used
The question may apply to air, space, or submarine travel in which the vehicle is operated by a crew instead of being operated by remote control.
uhhh, is it maybe 30ft?
They travel back in time to where dinosaurs once lived.
TV Travel Shop was created in 1998.
Have Camera Will Travel - 1956 - TV was released on: USA: 1956
Have Camera Will Travel - 1956 TV was released on: USA: 1956
Radio (and TV) waves are part of the electromagnetic spectrum and as such travel at the speed of light.
Have Coffin Will Travel - 2007 TV was released on: USA: 1 February 2007 (TV premiere)
Travel Memories Are We There Yet - 2005 TV was released on: USA: 2005