'Thomas Edison did not pay his promised money so he left and started his company.
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Thomas Edison and Nikola Tesla had a professional rivalry. Edison favored direct current (DC) electricity while Tesla championed alternating current (AC) technology. This led to conflict between them, especially during the "war of the currents." Despite this, they both respected each other's work and contributions to science and technology.
No, Nikola Tesla did not invent the light bulb. The light bulb was primarily invented by Thomas Edison, while Tesla made significant contributions to electrical power systems and various other inventions.
Thomas Edison and Nikola Tesla were rivals during the "War of Currents" in the late 1800s. The conflict between them was mainly over the use of alternating current (AC) versus direct current (DC) for electrical transmission and distribution. Tesla's invention of AC technology ultimately proved to be more efficient and practical, leading to Edison's eventual acceptance of it.
He couldn't make the inventions he was planning on doing. Nikola Tesla arrived in New York on June 6, 1884, set out to look for the friend he would live with, stopped to do an engine repair job he happened to find along the way, and met with Thomas Edison, a meeting he described as "a memorable event in my life." He quit working for Edison and started his own laboratory.
Edison and Tesla had different approaches to electricity - Edison favored direct current (DC) while Tesla promoted alternating current (AC). They also had conflicting personalities and clashed over their competing technologies. Edison's promotion of DC over AC led to a bitter rivalry between the two inventors.
Thomas Edison invented the first practical incandescent light bulb and the phonograph. William Dickson, a collaborator of Edison, is known for inventing the first motion picture camera, called the Kinetograph, along with the Kinetoscope for viewing motion pictures.