enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Telegram style - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Telegram_style

    This telegram was sent by Orville Wright in December 1903 from Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, following the first successful airplane flight. Telegram style , telegraph style , telegraphic style , or telegraphese [ 1 ] is a clipped way of writing which abbreviates words and packs information into the smallest possible number of words or characters.

  3. Telegraph code - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Telegraph_code

    The second division was a code book of 94 pages with 94 entries on each page. A code point was assigned for each number up to 94. Thus, only two symbols needed to be sent to transmit an entire sentence – the page and line numbers of the code book, compared to four symbols using the ten-symbol code. In 1799, three additional divisions were added.

  4. Telegraphy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Telegraphy

    As telegrams have been traditionally charged by the word, messages were often abbreviated to pack information into the smallest possible number of words, in what came to be called "telegram style". The average length of a telegram in the 1900s in the US was 11.93 words; more than half of the messages were 10 words or fewer. [ 81 ]

  5. Telegraphy in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Telegraphy_in_the_United...

    That year it handled 5.9 million messages with revenue of $6.0 million. By 1890 it had 19,400 offices linked by 679,000 miles of wire. It handled 56 million messages with a revenue of $29.1 million. [30] By 1900, Western Union operated a million miles of telegraph lines and two international undersea cables. AT&T gained control of Western Union ...

  6. Wireless telegraphy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wireless_telegraphy

    Efforts to find a way to transmit telegraph signals without wires grew out of the success of electric telegraph networks, the first instant telecommunication systems. [23] Developed beginning in the 1830s, a telegraph line was a person-to-person text message system consisting of multiple telegraph offices linked by an overhead wire supported on ...

  7. Electrical telegraph - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electrical_telegraph

    Cooke and Wheatstone's five-needle telegraph from 1837 Morse telegraph Hughes telegraph, an early (1855) teleprinter built by Siemens and Halske. Electrical telegraphy is a point-to-point text messaging system, primarily used from the 1840s until the late 20th century.

  8. Radiogram (message) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radiogram_(message)

    Also known as a radio telegram or radio telegraphic message, radiograms use a standardized message format, form and radiotelephone and/or radiotelegraph transmission procedures. These procedures typically provide a means of transmitting the content of the messages without including the names of the various headers and message sections, so as to ...

  9. Electrical telegraphy in the United Kingdom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electrical_telegraphy_in...

    Telegram numbers were 42 million in 1950, under 14 million in 1960, and only 7.7 million in 1970, the lowest it had ever been under nationalisation. [285] Repeated price rises by successive postmasters general, Ness Edwards and Ernest Marples , in an attempt to keep the deficit under control only made the situation worse by driving traffic down ...