- The
Audion was an
electronic detecting or
amplifying vacuum tube
invented by
American electrical engineer Lee de
Forest as a
diode in 1906. Improved, it...
- An
Audion is a
wireless signal detector device invented by Lee De
Forest in 1906.
Audion may also
refer to:
Audion (album), an
electronic music album...
-
Audion was a
media player developed by Panic. It was
originally a
commercial (shareware) program, but with the
dominance of Apple's iTunes, development...
- He
invented the
first practical electronic amplifier, the three-element "
Audion"
triode vacuum tube in 1906. This
helped start the
Electronic Age, and enabled...
-
audion receiver makes use of a
single vacuum tube or
transistor to
detect and
amplify signals. It is so
called because it
originally used the
audion tube...
- singles, such as "Stealing Moves" and the chart-topping "Mouth to Mouth" (as
Audion) were
issued on
Spectral Sound, Ghostly's
offshoot that
focuses on dancefloor...
- cathode, a grid, and a
plate (anode).
Developed from Lee De Forest's 1906
Audion, a
partial vacuum tube that
added a grid
electrode to the
thermionic diode...
- new
digital recording technologies. At
least two
tracks from the
album Audion (1981) were used as the
basis for
music in
Commodore 64
computer games:...
-
became available in 2001.
Panic retired Audion in 2004 and
began distributing it free of charge.
After Audion,
Panic focused development on two other...
-
amplifying signals. The
first practical version of such
devices was the
Audion triode,
invented in 1906 by Lee De Forest,
which led to the
first amplifiers...