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ABSTRACT THE speed with which in a decade or so broadcasting has passed from being the interest or hobby of an expert few into the pleasure and recreation of millions has tended to
concentrate attention on the purely scientific and technical developments which have made this change possible. The reactions of this rapid growth upon the listener himself, the new problems
which broadcasting itself may offer, have escaped attention except by a few, and it is only slowly and with difficulty that broadcasting is emerging from the toy stage to that of laboratory
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FAQs * Contact customer support RIGHTS AND PERMISSIONS Reprints and permissions ABOUT THIS ARTICLE CITE THIS ARTICLE Cultural Significance of Broadcasting*. _Nature_ 135, 1–3 (1935).
https://doi.org/10.1038/135001a0 Download citation * Issue Date: 05 January 1935 * DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/135001a0 SHARE THIS ARTICLE Anyone you share the following link with will be
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