Joseph Nicéphore Niépce
(7 March 1765 – 5 July 1833),[1] normally referred to or alluded to just as Nicéphore Niépce, was a French creator, generally credited as the designer of photography and a pioneer in that field.[2] Niépce created heliography, a strategy he used to make the world's most established enduring result of a photographic interaction: a print produced using a photoengraved printing plate in 1825.[3] In 1826 or 1827, he utilized a crude camera to deliver the most established enduring photo of a true scene. Among Niépce's different innovations was the Pyréolophore, the world's first inside burning motor, which he considered, made, and created with his more established sibling Claude Niépce.[4]
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