The Queen kept with the technology of the times and even sent the occational tweet (Picture: PA)

When it comes to technology, Queen Elizabeth II made a point of advocating for innovation throughout her reign.

From sending an email way back in 1976 to posting tweets and Instagram photos in the 2010s, she embraced digital media.

Even before she was Queen, she used a radio address to comfort children around the world during wartime.

In her younger days, she promoted technology like emails, staying savvy long into her old age — even if she sometimes needed a little help from her granchildren.

Here are some of the Queen’s most notable tech milestones:

Communication

Princess Elizabeth recording her first broadcast from Windsor, aired during Children’s Hour for BBC radio (Picture: mediadrumimages/TopFoto)

Radio: Before she took the throne, the young princess Elizabeth made her first public speech via radio during World War II. The future queen and her sister Margaret broadcast a message of hope for children across the Commonwealth during the speech.

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A hologram of Queen Elizabeth II during her coronation in the Gold State Coach during the Platinum Jubilee Pageant in front of Buckingham Palace, during the Platinum Jubilee celebrations (Picture: PA)

Television: You probably know the Queen’s 1953 coronation was a major TV event, driving a boom in sales of home sets. What you might not have heard is that it wasn’t just filmed in colour it was also recorded using experimental 3D technology.

the Queen spoke to astronauts on the International Space Station via a video link (Picture: Fiona Hanson/POOL/PA Wire)

Email: The Queen was the first monarch to send an email back in 1976, when she used an early computer network called ARPNET to deliver a technical update about the service.

Website: In 1997, the Queen launched the royal family’s first official website.

Video calling: Back in 2007, the Queen spoke to astronauts on the International Space Station via a video link at Nasa’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland, US.

Social media: Queen Elizabeth posted a video to Youtube in 2008, a tweet in 2014 and a photo to Instagram in 2019.

Devices

Queen Elizabeth II appears on a screen via videolink from Windsor Castle during a virtual audience to receive the Ambassador from the Socialist Republic of Vietnam at Buckingham Palace, London (Picture: PA)

Mobile phone: Prince Andrew is thought to have given his mother a mobile phone in 2010. Cautious of the devices’ potential for harm, a 2016 garden party guest said the Queen didn’t like her grandchildren spending too much time on their phones.

Computer: The Queen was thought to own a computer, but she apparently told that same guest she needed help from her grandchildren to use it properly.

Queen Elizabeth II tweeting on a tablet thanking everyone for their birthday messages (Picture: Buckingham Palace/PA Wire)

MP3 player: Long-rumoured to own at least one iPod, a silver MP3 player was finally spotted on a table at Balmoral Castle in 2017. Whether this was the device gifted by the Obamas back in 2009 has not been confirmed.

Tablet: The Queen added a tablet full of recorded memories of the last 60 years to the Royal Collection to mark her Diamond Jubilee in 2012. Featuring stories from more than 37,000 volunteers, the Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1 is considered a digital time capsule.

Transport

Queen Elizabeth II travels on a tube train after the official opening ceremony of London Underground’s Victoria Line, 7th March 1969.(Picture: Fox Photos/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)

Trains: In 1969, the Queen opened London’s Victoria tube line, named for her great-great-gandmother. She took the tube from Oxford Circus to Victoria station to mark the occasion.

Planes: A passenger on the supersonic Concorde’s 1977 inaugural Barbados to London flight, the Queen was pictured taking a tour of the cockpit.

Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II drives her Range Rover car as she arrives to attend the annual Royal Windsor Horse Show in Windsor, 2019 (Picture: Daniel LEAL / AFP)

Cars: Eschewing professional chauffeurs, Queen Elizabeth was often pictured driving herself throughout her reign. She drove an ambulance during World War II and was even spotted driving around the Windsor Estate as a nonagenarian.

 

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