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24 September 2014
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Inventions That Changed The World - programme synopses


The gun
The computer
The jet
The telephone
The television


The gun


The first invention covered in the series has generally had a negative press – the gun.


The need for a more accurate cannon led James Wilkinson, in 1774, to invent a tube boring machine.


This was then used by James Watt to make more efficient steam engines, which in turn powered the industrial revolution.


Gun maker Sam Colt was not only the inventor of the first reliable revolver, which helped early settlers to defeat the Indians and led to the myth of the cowboy, but also invented a new method of manufacturing guns – the production line.


Henry Ford made his Model T car affordable by copying, 'the Colt method'.


Even the car exhaust pipe was a spin-off of the gun silencer.


Street lighting was introduced to deter armed highway robbers whilst trauma medicine and the control of infections were initially developed to deal with gun injuries.


In the course of showing how the gun developed from a simple tube to a device capable of firing a million rounds a minute, Jeremy builds his own gun, goes FISHing (Fighting In Someone else's House) with British squaddies and tests the limits of the bullet proof vest.


The computer


In Victorian times 'computers' were people who added up rows of figures.


Now they are mechanical wonders - without them we couldn't fly planes, drive cars or even run our dishwashers.


We need them, but will they ever get smart enough to take over?

Jeremy Clarkson tells the story of the computer's evolution


Jeremy tells the remarkable story of the computer's evolution from man with pencil to android with sub-machine gun.


It's an epic spanning three centuries, a tale of passion, espionage and suicide – and it's far from over.


Jeremy discovers that the threat from computers lies not with Schwarzenegger's Terminator but from a much more devastating computer - Armageddon.


The computer might yet change the world in a way that none of us are expecting.


The jet

In 1929 a young pilot named Frank Whittle described his idea for a plane without propellers, a plane that could fly at more than 500mph and 30,000 feet above the ground.


His invention, the jet, would change our world, yet for over a decade he struggled to get financial backing.


In this programme Jeremy tells the all too British story of how Frank Whittle pioneered and yet lost this extraordinary invention.


Jeremy also heads off on a five day trip around the globe to explore the impact of Whittle's brainchild on the modern world.


He explores how the jet has encouraged a range of developments from tourism to the spread of SARS, from air crashes to jetlag.


Jeremy offers his own very opinionated take on the benefits of the jet.


The telephone


The telephone was invented by mistake by a man trying to make a humming telegraph.


Elisha Gray, who made the breakthrough, ended up with nothing while the person who 'borrowed' his idea and who is widely credited with having invented it - Alexander Graham Bell - would end up with the most valuable patent in history.


Jeremy tells an epic tale of money, greed, opportunism and blind chance.


As the telephone has evolved so has its applications: it has been used as an anonymous confessional and a tool of assassination; it has changed the way business is done and has allowed for the development of the internet.


Arguably, more than any other invention it has actually changed us and the ways we relate to each other.


And Jeremy discovers, to his horror, that it has also created a new breed of expert: the telephone anthropologist.


The television


In Europe we have more television sets than children and spend an average of nine years of our lives watching them.


Yet its inventors, two men with wildly different visions, died unrewarded.


This is the remarkable story of John Logie Baird, a Scotsman whose only previous successful invention was the thermal under-sock, and Philo T Farnsworth, a Mormon boy who at the age of 14 drew on a blackboard the outlines of an electronic television camera.


The first public television broadcaster was the Nazi party, not the Ö÷²¥´óÐã, but though Hitler recognised its propaganda potential, he missed its real value: television would help win the Battle of Britain, not because of what was on it but what was in it.


From terrorist outrages to soap operas, from obesity to politics, Jeremy gives his own unique take on how television has changed our world.


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All the Ö÷²¥´óÐã's digital services are now available on , the new free-to-view digital terrestrial television service, as well as on satellite and cable.

Freeview offers the Ö÷²¥´óÐã's eight television channels, interactive services from Ö÷²¥´óÐãi, as well as 11 national Ö÷²¥´óÐã radio networks.


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