This is lended to by the fact that in children’s books and schools in the USA Edison was portrayed as some magical fictional character who tied a key to a kite to invent electricity.
That story is associated with Benjamin Franklin.
Comment on Magnets
finitebanjo@lemmy.world 1 week agoIt’s not exactly proof of character but it’s pretty easy to verify that Edison’s patent of DC Electricity was NOT novel or new as a concept but did allow him to create a monopoly and massively enrich himself while also increasing costs on the average person of his time.
This is lended to by the fact that in children’s books and schools in the USA Edison was portrayed as some magical fictional character who tied a key to a kite to invent electricity. Clearly there is a campaign made to make him look like the hero he isn’t.
But it doesn’t stop there, Edison had many patents that almost all built on the works of others going back decades, although I do think that he did more work than he stole on audio recording and transmitting, but he also patented the Telegraph like a hundred times even though the Cook and Wheatstone Electric Telegraph existed over 50 years earlier: a time before Edison was even born.
He was an OK inventor but he was a cutthroat businessman.
This is lended to by the fact that in children’s books and schools in the USA Edison was portrayed as some magical fictional character who tied a key to a kite to invent electricity.
That story is associated with Benjamin Franklin.
You made this comment after the edit, which is kind of weird
I did not. Maybe there was a delay due to federation stuff making it seem like that.
Machinist@lemmy.world 1 week ago
Pedant moment. Benjamin Franklin was the key and kite guy. Edison was the lightbulb guy.
finitebanjo@lemmy.world 1 week ago
Sorry yeh I had those confused, but regardless of who it was a bullshit made up story.