
very weird to make a big point about the invention and the creator’s importance only talk about her and not the other half of the invention, her partner George Antheil instead of just having him be in small text in the little image. it’s very easy to find a lot of articles and official sites that credit both of them too, so saying she was “never” credited is def incorrect
never celebrated by who? she’s pretty celebrated (explicitly and primarily for this invention in many cases) by several news outlets (pbs, ny times) and official science sites (American physical society, Smithsonian, national inventors hall of fame) and literally all you have to do is google Hedy Lamarr and George Antheil. saying she’s “never celebrated” for her invention is just a straight up lie that a 2 second google search will help you a lot with
exactly lmao, you have to Google it which means you’re looking for info on her. she’s not taught in schools and people rarely talk about her except to say she should be talked about more. I love Lamarr and haven’t seen a single publication without actively looking for one, and I read a lot and see a lot of inventors. so no, she’s not celebrated as much as she should be.
yeah my bad I won’t Google it next time, I will wait for the dead inventor billboard to drive to my home and hit me in the face like all the other special celebrated inventors get to have bc none of them require an ounce of research on your own! or is it that everyone just already knows them without learning beforehand from school or any amount of the easiest possible research?
If I can find several immediate articles about you from reputable news sources and official science authorities including the American physical society, the Smithsonian, and the inventors hall of fame, you would be considered a celebrated inventor, yes. Einstein is a separate matter entirely, and is a different level than just the basis for wifi. The incredibly advanced equations and basic principles he is responsible are much more widely applicable across mathematics and physics