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I was specifically referring to the ability to communicate in writing at that speed. I guess the telegraph technically existed as well, but it was expensive and awkward.
2 0 ReplyWhat's writing? Is that a new feature on TikTok?
1 0 ReplyAnd couldn't reach across oceans, required special training, and only accommodated short messages because of the tedious nature of signaling.
1 0 ReplyYou could definitely send telegraphs overseas, and sending or receiving them required no training.
3 0 Replyand sending or receiving them required no training.
If you mean paying someone to send them, then sure. But it required learning Morse code, and learning to use a keyer.
You couldn't send them overseas until after
the invention of radio. Before that the signal traveled along a wirethey laid the transatlantic cable.1 0 ReplyThe first transatlantic telegraph cable was laid down in 1854 and radio waves weren't even theorized until 1873... https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transatlantic_telegraph_cable
4 0 ReplyI had no idea radio was such a recent discovery.
4 0 ReplyWhoops!
3 0 ReplyNo worries, we can't all know everything all the time.
3 0 ReplyI kinda suspected I might be wrong about that as I was typing it, and then I was like "Nah! That's just silly. Of course they didn't run a cable across the entire Atlantic Ocean in the 1800's!". But I was wrong. That's actually really impressive.
3 0 ReplyDuring a short window, a samurai could've faxed president Lincoln (though I believe the samurai and Lincoln would have had to be in the same country)
4 0 ReplyI remembered this article if you're interested in how we lay cable underwater today. It's even more wild since it's fiberoptic cable. https://www.theverge.com/c/24070570/internet-cables-undersea-deep-repair-ships
2 0 ReplyYou should look into how it was done. Weirdly enough, it's pretty similar to how we lay cable now.
2 0 Reply
The only way you were keying in a telegram yourself is if you worked for them.
1 0 Reply