Wireless battery
Dublin Core
Title
Wireless battery
Description
Communication sped up throughout the twentieth century, but news wasn’t that new by the time it got to Shetland by sea. The wireless meant islanders were up-to-the minute by the 1930s. Radios ran on batteries that were periodically re-charged. Most people went to a firm with a generator, although some homes had a wind-generator. On the Move gallery IMP 1997.16
Publisher
EULAC
Contributor
museums@eu-lac.org
Format
text/plain Alias/WaveFront Object
Language
English
Type
3D Object
License
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike License
Europeana
Country
Scotland
Europeana Data Provider
Shetland Museum and Archive
Object
https://sketchfab.com/models/2009399ddf5942678eaa6bf236bd4fdb/embed
Europeana Type
3D
3D Object Item Type Metadata
Wiki
https://eu-lac.org/vmwiki/index.php/Wireless_battery
DescriptionEN
Communication sped up throughout the twentieth century, but news wasn’t that new by the time it got to Shetland by sea. The wireless meant islanders were up-to-the minute by the 1930s. Radios ran on batteries that were periodically re-charged. Most people went to a firm with a generator, although some homes had a wind-generator. On the Move gallery IMP 1997.16
Files
Collection
Citation
“Wireless battery,” EU-LAC, accessed November 23, 2024, https://eu-lac.org/omeka/items/show/214.
Embed
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