Skip navigation

 Login or Register | Member Centre

Posted AT 10:38 AM EDT on 01/07/06

Lighting up the world -- again

Globe and Mail Update

Nikola Tesla harnessed the alternating current, invented radio technology and patented 700 inventions, including the wireless remote control and spark plugs. But by 1943, the inventor died alone of a heart attack in a New York hotel room -- a fringe figure, an also-ran in the scientific community. He was impoverished, obsessed with the number three and saw the Nobel Prize awarded to another man for an invention he had created years earlier.

The full text of this article has 1237 words.

To continue reading this article, you will need to purchase this article.

Already have a member account? Login now

Pay-Per-View Offers To read the complete article, select one of the following options

Purchasing from globeandmail.com is quick and secure.

Single Article: $4.95

4-pack: $17.95

Back to top