In 1939 he invented the Chromoscopic Adapter for Television.
The first color television broadcast was made on channel 5 on January 21, 1963, thanks to the expertise of Mexican engineer Guillermo González Camarena,
The series Children's Paradise changed the way the small screen was perceived until then. Color television thus obtained its first world patent.
González Camarena - born on February 17, 1917 - graduated from the National Polytechnic Institute, since the age of 15 had already built his own television system with pieces of waste that he obtained in markets of the popular colonies of Mexico City.
In 1935 the Mexican inventor began his studies on television, which later resulted in color TV.
In 1939 he invented the "Chromoscopic Adapter for Television", known as tricomático system sequences of fields, that worked with three base colors: green, blue and red. In 1940, with only 23 years, the inventor obtained the patent of this system in Mexico and the United States.
Six years later, the Mexican government granted Gonzalez Camarena permission to create an experimental TV channel from the Mexican League of Radio Experiments.
The engineer officially opened the channel 5 of open television in 1952, when a festival of the Day of the Mothers was transmitted.
It was until 1963 when color television made its triumphant debut with the Children's Paradise children series, through "Television González Camarena SA". (Drafting)