Yahoo Web Search

Search results

    • Telecommunication service

      • Telex is a telecommunication service that provides text-based message exchange over the circuits of the public switched telephone network or by private lines. The technology operates on switched station-to-station basis with teleprinter devices at the receiving and sending locations.
      en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Telex
  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › TelexTelex - Wikipedia

    Telex is a telecommunication service that provides text-based message exchange over the circuits of the public switched telephone network or by private lines. The technology operates on switched station-to-station basis with teleprinter devices at the receiving and sending locations. [1]

  2. People also ask

  3. Telex, international message-transfer service consisting of a network of teleprinters connected by a system of switched exchanges. Subscribers to a telex service can exchange textual communications and data directly and securely with one another.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. The advent of the telex machine in 1926 marked a revolutionary advancement in global communication. Invented in Germany by the pioneering physicist Dr. Erich Budelmann, this innovative technology enabled written messages to be rapidly transmitted across vast distances using existing telephone lines.

  5. Jul 14, 2017 · The global Telex network has had since inception a handy “confirmation’ convention called “Who Are You?” and each Telex machine is encoded with an “automatic answerback” that lets you know on connection and whenever you ask (WRU in Baudot; in ASCII) what machine you are connected to.

  6. By the 1960s, Telex became a worldwide, real-time, data communications service. Although diminishing each year, Telex is still used for commerce in more than 200 countries.

  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › TeleprinterTeleprinter - Wikipedia

    A global teleprinter network called Telex was developed in the late 1920s, and was used through most of the 20th century for business communications. The main difference from a standard teleprinter is that Telex includes a switched routing network, originally based on pulse-telephone dialing, which in the United States was provided by Western ...

  8. Telegraphy (from the Greek words tele = far and graphein = write) is the long-distance transmission of written messages without physical transport of letters. Originally, it involved changes that could be observed from a distance, known as optical telegraphy.

  1. People also search for