Rudolf Hell (19 December 1901 – 11 March 2002) was a German inventor. He was born in Eggmühl, Germany.
From 1919 to 1923 he studied electrical engineering in Munich.
He worked there from 1923 to 1929 as assistant of Prof. Max Dieckmann, with whom he operated a television station at the Verkehrsausstellung (lit.: Traffic exhibition) in Munich in 1925. In the same year Hell invented an apparatus called the Hellschreiber, an early forerunner to the fax. Hell received a patent for the Hellschreiber in 1929.
In the year 1929 he founded his own company in Babelsberg, Berlin. After World War II he re-founded his company in Kiel. He kept on working as an engineer and invented machines for electronically controlled engraving of printing plates and an electronic photo typesetting system called digiset marketed in the USA as VideoComp by RCA and later by III.
The camera never shows what is happening behind those gates of hell, never taking us beyond the walls of Hedwig’s blooming garden – but why would it, when Rudolf and his family turn a ...
Locals next to huge housing development say their life has been hell by loud and sweary buildersGrowing calls to install sprinklers in car parks following Luton blaze after similar inferno destroyed Liverpool multi-storey six years agoBEL MOONEY.
When anti-cultists discovered that the respected scholar was also the president of an organization promoting biodynamic agriculture and an admirer of Rudolf Steiner, all hell broke loose.
Francesca Hayward’s terror and disgust animated Stephanie, the bride who realises she has made the marriage deal from hell; Laura Morera brought a world-weary sadness to Larisch, Rudolf’s mistress turned procurer.