At the beginning of the 20th century, radio communication was becoming increasingly important throughout the world. Nikola Tesla was one of many inventors working on wireless communication technologies, but he faced strong competition from another inventor: Guglielmo Marconi.
Tesla and Marconi were working on wireless radio transmission technologies, but they approached the problem in different ways. Tesla believed that wireless transmission was possible using radio waves, while Marconi was working on wireless telegraphy technologies, which used electrical pulses to transmit messages.
The competition between the two inventors intensified when Marconi filed a patent for radio transmission technology in 1900. Tesla, who had worked on similar technology for years, challenged the patent, claiming that Marconi had used ideas he had developed earlier.
The legal dispute between Tesla and Marconi lasted for many years and was closely followed by the media and the scientific community. In 1943, after Tesla's death, the United States Supreme Court ruled that Marconi was not entitled to the patent he claimed, since his ideas were not new and had been put forward by other inventors, including Tesla.
The competition with Marconi was one of many challenges Tesla faced in his career. However, his determination and perseverance continued to drive him, and his quest for knowledge and innovation forever changed the way wireless communication is done today.