Poster
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2016.0204.001
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- OBJECT TYPE
- FRAMED
- DATE
- Unknown
- ARTIFACT NUMBER
- 2016.0204.001
- MANUFACTURER
- Unknown
- MODEL
- Unknown
- LOCATION
- Unknown
More Information
General Information
- Serial #
- N/A
- Part Number
- 1
- Total Parts
- 1
- AKA
- N/A
- Patents
- N/A
- General Description
- Paper poster with a painted wooden frame, a glass panel, and cardstock backer board.
Dimensions
Note: These reflect the general size for storage and are not necessarily representative of the object's true dimensions.
- Length
- 108.2 cm
- Width
- 2.0 cm
- Height
- 82.8 cm
- Thickness
- N/A
- Weight
- N/A
- Diameter
- N/A
- Volume
- N/A
Lexicon
- Group
- Communications
- Category
- Sound
- Sub-Category
- N/A
Manufacturer
- AKA
- Unknown
- Country
- Unknown
- State/Province
- Unknown
- City
- Unknown
Context
- Country
- Canada
- State/Province
- Ontario
- Period
- Unknown
- Canada
-
Bell Northern Research, was the research and development subsidiary of Northern Telecom (later Nortel Networks) and Bell Canada. It was built by Northern Telecom at its Trans-Canada plant in Montreal. Northern Telecom and its predecessor, Northern Electric, was for decades Canada’s largest manufacturer of telecommunications equipment. Originally a subsidiary of the AT&T-owned Western Electric, for which it manufactured American-designed products for the Canadian market, Northern Electric became Canadian-owned in the 1950s and in the 1960s began to design and produce equipment to meet the distinctive needs of Canadian telecommunication companies. In the 1970s, through its new research subsidiary, Bell Northern Research, the company made a concerted shift from conventional analogue equipment into the emerging field of digital communications, becoming in the 1980s the first equipment supplier to provide a complete line of fully digital switching and transmission gear. During this decade the company moved aggressively into export markets, and opened manufacturing and R&D operations in several countries. The company’s sales soared during the internet boom of the 1990s, but a combination of poor financial decisions and a failure to maintain its technological edge led eventually to its bankruptcy in 2009. The original Bell Northern facilities were designed with cutting edge telecommunications research and development in mind with the first three buildings on the campus featuring laboratories, an extensive research library, and an anechoic chamber. The anechoic chamber was the focal point of the Bell Northern Research acoustics research examining both the technology and placement of speakers and microphones in telecommunication devices. The anechoic chamber group was organized under the Industrial Design and working together with design were responsible for the development of the acoustic properties of most products. (From the Acquisition Proposal, see Ref. 1) - Function
-
Cut-away image of anechoic chamber. (From the Acquisition Proposal, see Ref. 1) - Technical
-
Image showing the material construction of the Nortel anechoic chamber. (From the Acquisition Proposal, see Ref. 1) - Area Notes
-
Unknown
Details
- Markings
- On the proper back: "No. 64/ HI-ART/ Artist/ ILLUSTRATION BOARDS"
- Missing
- Appears complete
- Finish
- A poster showing a two-point perspective of the anechoic chamber from the outside, with layers peeled away to reveal the various construction layers of the chamber. The diagram is background is light blue, grey and light purple. One side of the outside of the chamber is light grey, another is green, and the top is a darker gray. The layers are shown in red for brick, dark grey, and blue. The inside of the chamber is predominantly black and white. The frame of the poster is glossy black and there is a white and blue sticker with black writing on the bottom proper left corner. The backing is light brown with blue logos on the surface.
- Decoration
- N/A
CITE THIS OBJECT
If you choose to share our information about this collection object, please cite:
Unknown Manufacturer, Poster, Unknown Date, Artifact no. 2016.0204, Ingenium – Canada’s Museums of Science and Innovation, http://collection.ingeniumcanada.org/en/id/2016.0204.001/
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