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

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214-thumbnail.jpg

Citation

“Wireless battery,” EU-LAC, accessed April 28, 2024, https://eu-lac.org/omeka/items/show/214.

Embed

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