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NIKOLA TESLA BIOGRAPHY AND BOOKS

NIKOLA TESLA BIOGRAPIES AND BOOKS

NIKOLA TESLA BIOGRAPHIES

BOOKS AND INVENTIONS



BOOKS WRITTEN BY NIKOLA TESLA:


TESLA MAN OUT OF TIME:
The book Tesla man out of time is written by the writer ( Margaret Cheney): A classic biography that focuses on his eccentricities and his social life in New York in the book you will read about the life of nikola tesla in new York where dreams were born to build unimaginable 


THE LIFE OF NIKOLA TESLA :


The,Life of Nikola Tesla (by John J. O'Neill); The first biography ever written about him in (1944). While some facts has been changed since then, it has a poetic look on his life as he was close to him

BOOKS WRITTEN NIKOLA TESLA 

My Inventions:  The Autobiography of nikola tesla: Originally a series of magazine articles published in 1919, this is his most famous personal account, covering his full life including his child hood and his discoveries and much more
The /Problem of Increasing Human  Energy: a philosophical and scientific essay on how humen can produce more energy using less resourses

Document war by nikola tesla:
in the document the details of war was published between THOMAS EDISON (inventor of DC current) and nikola tesla father of AC current 

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SUMMARY

1. The Mind of a Visionary:

Tesla was no mere intelligent guy; he was an intellectual oddity. He said he never "designed" anything on paper first. He would construct a device in his mind, let it "run" for weeks to see which parts wore out, and only then would he construct the actual device.


He was also a man of very active habits.    He was fixated on the number three, had a pearl and germ phobia, and was said to only sleep two to three hours or may be foura night.His fixation allowed him to learn more than eight languages and memorize entire books. he was a real genius


2. The power struggle AC VS DC


When Tesla arrived at New York iduring 1884, he started working for Thomas Edison. Edison’s Direct Current (DC) was greatly known  at that time, but it had one major problem: it could not travel distance without losing its power.that was a major issue 


Tesla’s idea was for Alternating Current (AC), which utilized transformers to increase the voltage for long-distance transport and then reduce it for domestic use. Edison, worried about his bottom line, famously embarked on a smear campaign against AC, including actually electrocuting animals in public to demonstrate how “dangerous” AC was. The Turning Point Tesla later left Edison (after a dispute over a $50,000 bonus that Edison said was a "joke") and joined George Westinghouse. Their success at the 1893 World's Fair showed that AC was the only logical way to power a nation. This success gave birth to the modern power grid that we use today.


3. The Forgotten Inventions:


Though everyone knows Tesla for electricity, he was the "silent" force behind the creation of many other industries, including:

Neon and Fluorescent Lighting: Tesla was experimenting with "gas-discharge" lighting long before such lighting became common.

The Radio Controversy: Guglielmo Marconi was given the credit for the invention of the radio for many years. But the truth is that Marconi employed 17 of Tesla’s patents in his first radio broadcast. It took the U.S. Supreme Court until 1943, or rather after Tesla’s death, to take the credit away from Marconi and give it back to Tesla.


4. Wardenclyffe: The power of dream


Tesla's most important  project was the Wardenclyffe Tower in the long island. Tesla's goal was not only to transmit telegrams but also to transmit unlimited amounts of wireless electrical energy through the Earth's atmosphere.

He thought the Earth itself was a conductor. If his scheme had worked, we might have had a world "wireless" network for energy and information by 1920. But his main financier, J.P. Morgan, pulled out. The story goes that Morgan asked, "If anyone can tap into the power, where do I put the meter?" Without a means to capitalize on it, the project was abandoned.

5. A Final Act of Solitude:


Tesla passed his last years in the New Yorker Hotel. He turned vegetarian, lived on milk and honey, and claimed to have invented a "Death Beam" (Teleforce) capable of melting airplane engines from 250 miles away in order to deter war by "total deterrence."

When he died in 1943, the FBI allegedly took his trunks full of notes because they were afraid that his "Death Ray" might get into the wrong hands. Most of his work was returned to his nephew and is now kept in the Tesla Museum in Belgrade.


Why Tesla Matters Today


Tesla was not a businessman; he was a "pure" scientist. He was more interested in the betterment of humanity than in his own bank account. Today, every time you: Use a Remote Control
A remote control Turn on a Microwave Use Wi-Fi or Bluetooth





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