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Character evaluation of Hedy Lamarr

Hedy Lamarr is still stunning after arriving in Hollywood. She has been stunning in Hollywood for nearly 40 years. She has worked with several movie stars including Clark Gable, but she has never won any awards. Awards. Even in the era of color films, when new idols such as Audrey Hepburn and Marilyn Monroe took the world by storm, the nearly 50-year-old still stunned all living beings with her beauty in "The Enchantress" and made many young people The actresses felt inferior. It is a pity that despite his stunning appearance, there is no masterpiece that has been handed down from generation to generation.

I think she is the most incredible woman of the last century, and her value is far more than that of Garbo, who is so obsessed with the Sphinx.

But she has such a rigorous scientific mind and has contributed such valuable inventions to the world.

Rama in light and shadow, a mysterious woman!

In 1997, the Electronic Communications Foundation was going to award Heidi this landmark invention fifty years ago. Heidi could no longer leave the house.

When Hedy Lamarr passed away in 2000, the World Communications Association spoke highly of her, saying that she was a person who had made significant contributions to mankind.

Hedy Lamarr is considered the technological originator of CDMA.

Life is like a play

In fact, it is not the case. In the era of black and white films, the person who officially held the title of "the most beautiful woman" was Hedy Lamarr.

Heidi Lamarr is the daughter of an Austrian banker and was once known as "the most beautiful woman in the world." In 1932, he became famous worldwide for starring in the first film in which two persons were fully exposed, "Charmed". In 1966, he published a controversial autobiography, becoming the first person to expose the privacy of his personal passions. He has since disappeared from the film industry. In addition, Rama is also a communication inventor with outstanding contributions. She invented the principle of spread spectrum communication technology! Rama passed away on January 19, 2000. "The Enchantress" is her most famous work.

In 1932, Hedy Lamarr exposed her beautiful body for the first time in film history. Until her wealthy businessman husband wanted to buy out the copy, but no one was willing to sell out this "most beautiful woman on the screen."

Hedy Lamarr was born in Vienna. When she was 19 years old in 1933, she was famous in She appeared in a nude swimming scene in the infamous Czech film "Bewitched", making her the first actress to perform a nude scene in the history of world cinema. This woman, who was once recognized as the most beautiful woman in the world, later unfortunately married a totalitarian Austrian military supplies supplier, but eventually she drugged the maid and escaped from the window, all the way to Hollywood. There, she became a shining movie star alongside Spencer Tracy, Clark Gable and Jimmy Stewart.

The Alfred Sloan Foundation believes that Heidi's life itself is a carefully planned movie.

The Alfred Sloan Foundation mainly supports the research of scientific and technological projects, such as digital sky census, mapping of galaxies, etc., and applies these scientific and technological themes to the creativity of movie scripts. In 2004, Gretchen, a female writer from Los Angeles, received this fund in recognition of her script about Hedy Lamarr. Gretchen admits that technology was her worst subject in school, but in Lamarr’s story, it wasn’t the technology itself that really attracted her, but Hedy Lamarr—the woman who was more than just beautiful. A huge effort.

Rama was a woman who lived outside her time. Living in that era, her potential had already exceeded her time and space. During her marriage to an arms dealer, Lamarr attended her husband's business meetings and incredibly learned to control weapons with radio signals, what we today call "bombs." But radio signals sometimes get blocked. Rama had the foresight to realize that constantly and randomly changing the frequency of radio waves could prevent signal jamming and prevent enemy interference. In the early 1940s, she and composer George designed an aircraft navigation system. Inspired by the piano, George conceived a pair of paper rolls, placed inside the aircraft and the torpedo, to specify the sequence of changing frequencies. Lamarr and George patented their "frequency hopping" device design and donated it to the government. However, the Allies expressed doubts about whether the two scrolls could really be of such great effect and refused to try, but kept them secret. The New York Times on October 1, 1941 briefly introduced Lamarr's invention, saying: "Her invention is so crucial that the government refuses to disclose the details."

In the late 1950s, Lamar's outstanding design idea was widely used in military computer chips, so the patent was kept secret until 1985. Therefore, Lamar was unable to receive any honors for it at that time. Since then, this technology has also inspired many scientists in the field of communications, and has been widely used in the development of mobile phones, wireless phones and Internet protocols so that many people can use the same frequency band radio signals at the same time.

In 1997, Hedy Lamarr received the Electronic Frontier Foundation's Pioneer Award, which recognized her contributions to computer communications. In recognition of her work in World War II, she contributed her talents to the design of the signaling device in the "remotely controlled torpedo". Later wireless networks and mobile phones were influenced by her creativity at that time.

In her later years, Hedy Lamarr lived a reclusive life and died in 2000. Today, the New York Times reported on Hedy Lamarr, reminding us that Lamarr once said: "All girls can be dazzling."

Hedy Lamarr

< p>Hedy Lamarr looks exactly like Vivien Leigh and also participated in the audition for "Gone with the Wind". Unfortunately, she did not leave a deep impression on people in the film industry. People remember her, firstly, because of her peerless beauty, and secondly, because she was the inventor of the mobile phone.

Heidi was born on November 9, 1914 in Vienna into a Jewish banker family.

In 1932, a Czechoslovak film company invited 18-year-old Heidi to be the heroine of "Charmed".

Heidi became the first celebrity in the world to appear naked. In the film, her beautiful face and graceful body running in the woods not only shocked the audience, but also brought overwhelming criticism.

But Heidi doesn’t think there’s anything wrong with nudity. "If you use your imagination, you can see any actress naked," she said. Austrian arms tycoon Mandel quickly turned his imaginary desire into action and married Heidi.

The well-educated Heidi secretly absorbed many valuable concepts.

Mandel did not expect that Heidi, who majored in communications, would basically master this technology after a few months.

In the process of discussing and developing communication technology, Heidi was firmly anti-Nazi, which led to irreconcilable conflicts between her and her arms dealer husband. In 1937, this marriage came to an end.

Soon after, Heidi entered Hollywood under the introduction of Meyer from MGM.

Heidi has participated in 25 plays. After missing out on roles in "Gaslight" and "Casablanca", her vase image never had a chance to turn around. She spent her entire acting career on the screen as a human background, with no classic works.

Heidi decided to join the scientific community. She wanted to prove that there was more to her than just her face.

In the U.S. Patent Office, there was once a "secret communication system" patent with patent number 2292387 that was passed on August 11, 1942. The application deadline was June 10, 1941. One of the applicants is Heidi Lamarr. It wasn't until 1997 when the Electronic Frontier Foundation of the United States awarded the first applicant of this patent, Hedy Lamarr, the Honorary Technology Medal that she really came into our sight. This is also the most beautiful scientist in the world.

There are two owners of this patent. Among them, George Ansel was a well-known composer at the time, and the first one was Hedy Lamarr. This technology is the basis of mobile phones.

In the early 1940s, Heidi met George Ansel, a composer who hated the Nazis in Hollywood. One day, Heidi mentioned to him the idea of ??developing a military communication system that could withstand enemy radio interference or eavesdropping.

Relying on the wisdom of the two people and the help of other scientists, they completed this research and obtained the U.S. patent in August 1942.

This is "frequency hopping technology" which is the predecessor of CDMA.

In the late 1950s, Heidi's outstanding design idea was widely used in military computer chips, so the patent remained confidential until the end of the Cold War.

After the end of the Cold War, the US military deregulated frequency hopping technology and allowed its commercialization.

In 1985, a little-known small company in the United States quietly developed a CDMA wireless digital communication system based on frequency hopping technology. This company was Qualcomm. Qualcomm has become a Fortune 500 company, but Heidi, the inventor of its theory, has almost been forgotten!

Heidi was the first to propose frequency hopping to expand communication capacity and keep information confidential. way, using his wisdom to change the world.

Based on the "frequency hopping" technology, Mock, a well-known engineer and analyst in the global telecommunications and communication technology industry, described this in his biography "Qualcomm Formula" published in 2005. A woman who combines beauty and wisdom.