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High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! Rudolf Goldschmidt (March 19, 1876, Neubukow, Mecklenburg 1950, London) was a German engineer and inventor. Goldschmidt was born in Neubukow and earned an engineering degree in 1878. He spent the following decade working in England with major firms such as Westinghouse. Subsequently he returned to Germany and eventually became a professor at Darmstadt. During this period he developed the high-frequency radio-telegraph apparatus known as Goldschmidt Alternator, used in the first direct communications link between Germany and the United States, which…mehr

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High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! Rudolf Goldschmidt (March 19, 1876, Neubukow, Mecklenburg 1950, London) was a German engineer and inventor. Goldschmidt was born in Neubukow and earned an engineering degree in 1878. He spent the following decade working in England with major firms such as Westinghouse. Subsequently he returned to Germany and eventually became a professor at Darmstadt. During this period he developed the high-frequency radio-telegraph apparatus known as Goldschmidt Alternator, used in the first direct communications link between Germany and the United States, which was inaugurated on June 19, 1914 with a ceremonial exchange of telegrams between Kaiser Wilhelm II and President Woodrow Wilson. During the nineteen twenties, Goldschmidt directed an industrial research lab in Berlin. Here he met Albert Einstein. In 1928, a singer with whom the physicist was acquainted suffered a hearing loss, which misfortune set Einstein to thinking about hearing aids. Soonhe had an idea and asked Goldschmidt to help him develop a working model.