Channel surfing was born five decades ago. The first TV remote 
        control, called "Lazy Bones," was developed in 1950 by Zenith 
        Electronics Corporation (then known as Zenith Radio Corporation). Lazy 
        Bones used a cable that ran from the TV set to the viewer. A motor in 
        the TV set operated the tuner through the remote control.
        By pushing buttons on the remote control, viewers rotated the tuner 
        clockwise or counterclockwise, depending on whether they wanted to 
        change the channel to a higher or lower number. The remote control 
        included buttons that turned the TV on and off.
        Although customers liked having remote control of their television, 
        they complained that people tripped over the unsightly cable that 
        meandered across the living room floor.
        Commander Eugene F. McDonald Jr., Zenith's late founder-president, 
        believed TV viewers would not tolerate commercials and was convinced 
        that sooner or later commercial television would collapse. While waiting 
        for the development of commercial-free subscription television, McDonald 
        yearned for a wireless remote control that would mute the sound of 
        commercials.
        
        Flashmatic: The First Wireless TV Remote
        
        Zenith engineer Eugene Polley invented the "Flashmatic," which 
        represented the industry's first wireless TV remote. Introduced in 1955, 
        Flashmatic operated by means of four photo cells, one in each corner of 
        the TV screen. The viewer used a highly directional flashlight to 
        activate the four control functions, which turned the picture and sound 
        on and off and changed channels by turning the tuner dial clockwise and 
        counter-clockwise.
        While it pioneered the concept of wireless TV remote control, the 
        Flashmatic had some limitations. It was a simple device that had no 
        protection circuits and, if the TV sat in an area in which the sun shone 
        directly on it, the tuner might start rotating.
        Development Challenges 
        Commander McDonald loved the concepts proven by Polley's Flashmatic 
        and directed his engineers to develop a better remote control. First 
        thoughts pointed to radio. But, because they travel through walls, radio 
        waves could inadvertently control a TV set in an adjacent apartment or 
        room.
        Using distinctive sound signals was discussed, but Zenith engineers 
        believed people might not like hearing a certain sound that would become 
        characteristic of operating the TV set through a remote control. It also 
        would be difficult to find a sound that wouldn't accidentally be 
        duplicated by either household noises or by the sound coming from TV 
        programming.
        Regardless of the specific system chosen, Zenith sales people were 
        against using batteries in the remote control. In those days, batteries 
        were used primarily in flashlights. If the battery went dead, the sales 
        staff said, the customer might think something was wrong with the TV. If 
        the remote control didn't emit light or show any other visible sign of 
        functioning, people would think it was broken once the batteries died.
        
The Birth of Space Command 
        Zenith's Dr. Robert Adler suggested using "ultrasonics," that is, 
        high-frequency sound, beyond the range of human hearing. He was assigned 
        to lead a team of engineers to work on the first use of ultrasonics 
        technology in the home as a new approach for a remote control.
        The transmitter used no batteries; it was built around aluminum rods 
        that were light in weight and, when struck at one end, emitted 
        distinctive high-frequency sounds. The first such remote control used 
        four rods, each approximately 2-1/2 inches long: one for channel up, one 
        for channel down, one for sound on and off, and one for on and off.
        They were very carefully cut to lengths that would generate four 
        slightly different frequencies. They were excited by a trigger mechanism 
        - similar to the trigger of a gun - that stretched a spring and then 
        released it so that a small hammer would strike the end of the aluminum 
        rod.
        The device was developed quickly, with the design phase beginning in 
        1955. Called "Zenith Space Command," the remote went into production in 
        the fall of 1956, becoming the first practical wireless remote control 
        device.
        Quarter Century of Ultrasonic Remotes
        
        The original Space Command remote control was expensive because an 
        elaborate receiver in the TV set, using six additional vacuum tubes, was 
        needed to pick up and process the signals. Although adding the remote 
        control system increased the price of the TV set by about 30 percent, it 
        was a technical success and was adopted in later years by other 
        manufacturers.
        In the early 1960s, solid-state circuitry (i.e., transistors) began 
        to replace vacuum tubes. Hand-held, battery-powered control units could 
        now be designed to generate the inaudible sound electronically. In this 
        modified form, Dr. Adler's ultrasonic remote control invention lasted 
        through the early 1980s, a quarter century from its inception.
        More than 9 million ultrasonic remote control TVs were sold by the 
        industry during the 25-year reign of Dr. Adler's invention.
        
        Today's Infrared Remote Controls 
        By the early 1980s, the industry moved to infrared, or IR, remote 
        technology. The IR remote works by using a low frequency light beam, so 
        low that the human eye cannot see it, but which can be detected by a 
        receiver in the TV. Zenith's development of cable-compatible tuning and 
        teletext technologies in the 1980s greatly enhanced the capabilities and 
        uses for infrared TV remotes.
        Today, remote control is a standard feature on other consumer 
        electronics products, including VCRs, cable and satellite boxes, digital 
        video disc players and home audio receivers. And the most sophisticated 
        TV sets have remotes with as many as 50 buttons. In 2000, more than 99 
        percent of all TV sets and 100 percent of all VCRs and DVD players sold 
        in the United States are equipped with remote control.