Top 3 famous stolen inventions in history Brightviu Galileo Galilei was an Italian astronomer, physicist and mathematician. If yo...
Top 3 famous stolen inventions in history
Brightviu
Galileo Galilei was an Italian astronomer, physicist and mathematician. If you asked the same question to your friends or an average high schooler what Galileo's lasting contribution to science was, they would most likely reply "the telescope" you also thinking same, is it correct?
Galileo Galilei was an Italian astronomer, physicist and mathematician. If you asked the same question to your friends or an average high schooler what Galileo's lasting contribution to science was, they would most likely reply "the telescope" you also thinking same, is it correct?
Who Actually Invented It?
The answer is Dutchman Hans Lippershey. In 1608, Lippershey completed the first ever telescope and attempted to receive a patent for it, but was denied for no discernible reason.
Lippershey's telescope |
Alexander Graham Bell
after reading the Galileo story you all are came to one decision that Alexander Graham Bell also cheated....! yes you are correct.
In 1860, an Italian named Antonio Meucci first demonstrated his working telephone, (though he called it the "teletrofono,"). Eleven years later, (still five years before Bell's phone came out), he filed a temporary patent on his invention. In 1874, Meucci failed to send in the $10 necessary to renew his patent, because he was sick and poor.
Two years after that, Bell registered his telephone patent. Meucci attempted to sue, of course, by retrieving the original sketches and plans he sent to a lab at Western Union, but these records, quite amazingly, disappeared. Where was Bell working at this time? Why, the very same Western Union lab where Meucci swore he sent his original sketches. Eventually, Meucci died penniless and faded away into obscurity.
Thomas Edison
Thomas Edison. The "Wizard of Menlo Park." Described as one of the "world's most prolific inventors" with a record-breaking 1,093 patents to his name.
Edison was a dreamer and he couldn't be satisfied with just one, dead disgraced inventor under his belt. So, after Goebel, and a year before Edison "invented" his light bulb, Joseph Wilson Swan developed and patented a working light bulb. When it was clear Edison's defense wouldn't hold up in court, he made Swan a partner, forming the Ediswan United Company and effectively buying Swan and his patent.
learn more
https://brightviu.com/earths-north-magnetic-pole-shifts-need-a-navigation-update/
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