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The Victorian Internet
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The Victorian Internet
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Tom Standage
_
The Victorian Internet
However, one listing of common abbreviations compiled in 1859 includes "1 1" {dot dot, dot dot} for "I AM READY"; "G A" {dash dash dot, dot dash} for "GO AHEAD", "S F D" for "STOP FOR DINNER"; "G M" for "GOOD MORNING.
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Tom Standage
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The Victorian Internet
Post Horses and Conveyances of every description may be ordered by the electric telegraph to be in readiness on the arrival of a train, at either Paddington or Slough Station.
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Tom Standage
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The Victorian Internet
He proposed a steam-powered pneumatic tube system to carry telegraph forms the short distance from the Stock Exchange to the main telegraph office.
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Tom Standage
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The Victorian Internet
Chappe also had all sorts of ambitious plans for his invention; he hadn't intended its use to be so predominantly military in nature, and wanted to promote its employment in business."
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Tom Standage
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The Victorian Internet
According to an account in Anecdotes of the Telegraph, when his request was questioned, the man ran off, "grinning a horrible, ghastly smile".
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Tom Standage
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The Victorian Internet
in Britain, for example, it meant that a centralized "nickname" system could be introduced. Under this scheme, companies and individuals could reserve a special word as their "telegraphic address" to make life easier for anyone who wanted to send them a telegram.
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Tom Standage
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The Victorian Internet
One writer, Gardiner Hubbard, described the American telegraph system as "peculiarly a business system; eighty per cent of the messages are on business matters… . the managers of the telegraph know that their business customers want the quickest and best service, and care more for dispatch than low tariffs. Thus the great difference between the telegraph systems of Europe and America is that {in Europe}, the telegraph is used principally for social correspondence, here by businessmen for business purposes." The
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Tom Standage
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The Victorian Internet
The exchange of consent being given by the electric flash, they were thus married by telegraph.
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Tom Standage
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The Victorian Internet
In 1872, Western Union {by then the dominant telegraph company in the United States} decided to implement a new, secure scheme to enable sums of up to $100 to be transferred between several hundred towns by telegraph. The system worked by dividing the company's network into twenty districts, each of which had its own superintendent. A telegram from the sender's office to the district superintendent confirmed that the money had been deposited; the superintendent would then send another telegram to the recipient's office authorizing the payment. Both of these messages used a code based on numbered codebooks. Each telegraph office had one of these books, with pages containing hundreds of words. But the numbers next to these words varied from office to office; only the district superintendent had copies of each office's uniquely numbered book.
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Tom Standage
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The Victorian Internet
A particularly important use of codes a was by banks. Worries about the security of telegraphic money transfers
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