Copyright © Philip M. Parker, INSEAD. Terms of Use.

Definitions: Telegraphy |
TelegraphyNoun1. Communicating at a distance by electric transmission over wire. 2. Apparatus used to communicate at a distance over a wire (usually in Morse code). Source: WordNet 1.7.1 Copyright © 2001 by Princeton University. All rights reserved. |
Date "telegraphy" was first used in popular English literature: sometime before 1899. (references) |
| Domain | Definitions |
Computing | A form of telecommunication in which the transmitted information is intended to be recorded on arrival as a graphic document. Source: European Union. (references) |
Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits. | |
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
Telegraphy is the long distance transmission of written messages without physical transport of letters. This definition includes recent forms of data transmission such as fax, email, and computer networks in general. (A telegraph is a machine for transmitting and receiving messages over long distances, i.e. for telegraphy.)
Semaphores are faster than smoke signals and beacons and consume no fuel. They are hundreds of times as fast as post riders and serve entire regions. However they require operators and towers every 30 km (20 mi), and only send about two words per minute. This causes them to have a cost per word-mile roughly thirty times as high as electric telegraphs. This is useful to government, but too expensive for most commercial uses other than commodity price information.
The first commercial electrical telegraph constructed by Sir Charles Wheatstone entered use in London in 1838. An electrical telegraph was US-patented in 1842 by Samuel Morse, whose assistant, Alfred Vail developed the Morse code signalling alphabet. It was quickly deployed in the following two decades. Nikola Tesla and other scientists and inventors showed the usefulness of wireless telegraphy, or radio, beginning in the 1860s.
A continuing goal in telegraphy has been to reduce the cost per message by reducing hand-work, or increasing the sending rate. There were many experiments with moving pointers, and various electrical encodings. However, most systems were too complicated and unreliable.
With the invention of the teletypewriter, telegraphic encoding became fully automated. Early teletypewriters used Baudot code, a 5-bit code. This yielded only thirty two codes, so it was over-defined into two "shifts," "letters" and "figures." An explicit, unshared shift code prefaced each set of letters and figures.
A standard timing system developed for telecommunications. The "space" state was defined as the powered state of the wire. In this way, it was immediately apparent when the line itself failed. The characters were sent by first sending a "start bit" that pulled the line to the unpowered "mark state." The start bit triggered a wheeled commutator run by a motor with a precise speed (later, digital electronics). The commutator distributed the bits from the line to a series of relays that would "capture" the bits. A "stop bit" was then sent at the powered "space state" to assure that the commutator would have time to stop, and be ready for the next character. The stop bit triggered the printing mechanism. Often, two stop bits were sent to give the mechanism time to finish and stop vibrating.
The transatlantic telegraph cable was then successfully completed on July 27, 1866 which for the first time allowed transatlantic telegraph communications. Another advance occurred on August 9, 1892, when Thomas Edison received a patent for a two-way telegraph.
By 1935 message routing was the last great barrier to full automation. Large telegraphy providers began to develop systems that used telephone-like rotary dialing to connect teletypes. These machines were called "telex." Telex machines first performed rotary-telephone-style pulse dialing, and then sent baudot code. This "type A" telex routing functionally automated message routing.
The Third Reich invented the first wide-coverage telex system, and used it to coordinate their bureaucracy. It was a true triumph of German efficiency.
At the then-blinding rate of 45.5 bits per second, up to 25 telex channels could share a single long-distance telephone channel, making telex the least expensive method of performing reliable long-distance communication.
In 1970 Cuba and Pakistan were still running 45.5 baud type A telex. Telex is still widely used in third-world bureaucracies, probably because of its low costs. The U.N. asserts that more political entities are reliably available by telex than by any other single method.
When dictatorships cut off telephone, fax and internet service, their telex networks remain up. A major advantage for dictatorships is that telex networks are easy to tap: Taps automatically generate complete transcripts.
Around 1960[?], some nations began to use the "figures" baudot codes to perform "Type B" telex routing.
Telex grew around the world very rapidly. Long before automatic telephony was available, most countries, even in central Africa and Asia, had at least a few high-frequency (shortwave) telex links. Often these radio links were the first established by government postal and telegraph services (PTTs). The most common radio standard, CCITT R.44 had error-corrected retransmitting time-division multiplexing of radio channels. Most impoverished PTTs operated their telex-on-radio (TOR) channels non-stop, to get the maximum value from them.
The cost of telex on radio (TOR) equipment has continued to fall. Many amateur radio operators ) operate TOR with special softare and inexpensive adapters from computer sound cards to shortwave radios.
Modern "cablegrams" or "telegrams" actually operate over dedicated telex networks, using TOR whenever required.
In Germany alone, more than 400,000 telex lines remain in daily operation. Over most of the world, more than three million telex lines remain in use.
Almost in parallel with Germany's telex system, Bell Labs in the 1930s decided to go telex one better, and began developing a similar service (with pulse dialing and all!) called "Teletype Wide-area eXchange" (TWX).
TWX originally ran 75 bits per second, sending Baudot code and dial selection. However, Bell developed a second generation of "four row" modems called the "Bell 101 dataset," which is the direct ancestor of the Bell 103 that launched computer time-sharing. The 101 was revolutionary because it ran on ordinary subscriber lines that could (at the office) be routed to special exchanges called "wide-area data service." Because it was using the public switched telephone network, TWX had special area codes: 510, 610, 710, 810 and 910, some of which remain in use.
The "four row" TWX service had "control characters" that let the machine behave like office typewriters. These provided paragraph indentation, form feeds, and other services that were never available with Baudot codes. However, the TWX code only used 93 of 128 characters.
The Teletype corporation was founded by a Dr. Kleinschmidt. It had the cheapest teletypewriters that could be adapted to the TWX code. Bell purchased the corporation to assure its supply of "model 33" TWX teletypewriters.
The model 33 was the cheapest teletypewriter available for use with computers. Computer people of course wanted a full set of characters. Teletype provided them.
ASCII was born from TWX code. It was formalized as CCITT international alphabet 5. Careful study will show that ASCII traces many character codes back to Baudot, which in turn traces some characters back to manual telegraphy.
Bell's original consent agreement limited it to international dial telephony. WUTCo (Western Union Telegraph Company) had given up its international telegraphic operation in a 1939 bid to monopolize U.S. telegraphy by taking over ITT's PTT business. The result was deemphasis on telex in the U.S. and a cat's cradle of small U.S. international telex and telegraphy companies. These were known by regulatory agencies as "International Record Carriers"
Around 1965, in a near-psychotic break with existing standards, DARPA commissioned a study of decentralized switching systems, hoping to find something more advanced than TOR that could still hope to survive a nuclear war. The contractors developed the internet.
The internet was a radical break in three ways. First, it was designed to operate over any media. Second, routing was decentralized. Third, large messages were broken into fixed size packets, and then reassembled at the destination. All previous networks had used controlled media, centralized routers and dedicated connections.
The internet was designed with nearly grotesque economies. It is commonplace for internet packets to use less than 1% of their bits for overhead. This cheapness combines synergistically with the internet's ability to live on other media. A typical cycle occurs when the internet encounters another network, like telex, fidonet, ATM, or (as we are seeing with cable-modem based internet phones) the public switched telephone network:
In 1982, the U.S. Congress deregulated the IRCs. They began combining to get economies of scale. All of their descendants offer voice, video and data services.
In 1992, computer access via modem combined with cheap computers, and graphic point & click interfaces to give a radical alternative to conventional telex systems: personal e-mail.
E-mail was first invented for Multics in the late 1960s. However it was limited to a single computer until the internet connected them around 1968. Various private networks (UUNET, the Well, GENIE, DECNET) had e-mail from the 1970s, but subscriptions were quite expensive for an individual- $25 to $50 a month, just for e-mail. Internet use was then pretty much limited to government, academia and other government contractors until the net was opened to commercial use around 1989[?]. Individual e-mail accounts were not widely available until local ISPs were in place, funded by people's desire for web access. This was about 1992.
By using the time-shared systems almost end-to-end, the cost of data communications plummeted to less than 10 cents a message.
International Telex remains available via e-mail ports. It is one's e-mail address with numeric or alpha prefixes specifying one's IRC and account.
Telex has always had a feature called "answerback", that asks a remote machine to send its address. If using telex via e-mail, this address is what a remote telex user will want in order to contact an e-mail user.
This is how smoke-signals became modern digital telecommunications.
See optical telegraph, electrical telegraph, Morse code, Samuel Morse.
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "Telegraphy."
Synonym: TelegraphySynonym: telegraph (n). (additional references) |
| Context | Synonyms within Context (source: adapted from Roget's Thesaurus). |
Indication | Gesture, gesticulation; pantomime; wink, glance, leer; nod, shrug, beck; touch, nudge; dactylology, dactylonomy; freemasonry, telegraphy, chirology, byplay, dumb show; cue; hint; clue, clew, key, scent. |
Publication | The Press, public press, newspaper, journal, gazette, daily; telegraphy; publisher; Verb: imprint. |
| Source: adapted from Roget's Thesaurus. | |
Crosswords: Telegraphy |
| English words defined with "telegraphy": Duplex telegraphy ♦ First Baron Kelvin ♦ Hertzian telegraphy ♦ kelvin, Kerite ♦ radiogram, radiotelegraph, radiotelegraphic signal, radiotelegraphy ♦ simplex ♦ telegraphic signal ♦ William Thompson, wireless telegraphy, Wireless telephony. (references) |
| Specialty definitions using "telegraphy": balancing network, baseband ♦ CCITT, CLERK, ROUTE ♦ diplex, double-duplex ♦ facsimile telegraphy, Frequency Shift Keying, full-duplex ♦ geomagnetician ♦ half-duplex, Hell system, Hellschreiber system ♦ impedance simulating network ♦ modulation keying ♦ single-duplex. (references) |
| Etymologies containing "telegraphy": Radiotelegraphy. (references) |
| Domain | Usage | |
Movie/TV Titles | ||
Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits. | ||
| Domain | Title |
References | |
Books |
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Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits. | |
| Author | Date | Quotation |
Treaty of Versailles | 1919 | During the same period Germany shall not build any more high-power wireless telegraphy stations in her own territory or that of Austria, Hungary, Bulgaria or Turkey. (reference) |
Source: compiled by the editor from various references. | ||
| Subject | Topic | Quote |
Civil Liberties | Guyana | The existing laws--the Post and Telegraph Act and Wireless Telegraphy Regulations--are to remain in effect until a Commission on Broadcasting develops new broadcasting legislation. (references) |
Trade | Turkey | Telecommunications equipment such as automatic data processing machines, electrical apparatus for line telephony or telegraphy, and telephone answering machines need type-approval of the recently announced Turkish Telecommunications Regulatory Authority. (references) |
Source: compiled by the editor from ICON Group International, Inc.; see credits. | ||
| "Telegraphy" is generally used as a noun (singular) -- approximately 100.00% of the time. "Telegraphy" is used about 24 times out of a sample of 100 million words spoken or written in English. Its rank is based on over 700,000 words used in the English language. Some parts-of-speech are not covered due to the samples used by the British National Corpus. (note: percents less than one-hundredth of one percent have been omitted) |
| Parts of Speech | Percent | Usage per 100 Million Words | Rank in English |
| Noun (singular) | 100% | 24 | 71,196 |
Source: compiled by the editor from several corpora; see credits.
Expressions using "telegraphy": Duplex telegraphy ♦ facsimile telegraphy ♦ Hertzian telegraphy ♦ telegraphy or telegraph ♦ wireless telegraphy. Additional references. | |
| Hypenated Usage | |
Ending with "telegraphy": Electro-telegraphy, radio-telegraphy. | |
| Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits. | |
| The following statistics estimate the number of searches per day across the major English-language search engines as identified by various trade publications. Hyperlinks lead to commercial use of the expression at Amazon.com. |
| Expression | Frequency per Day |
telegraphy | 7 |
history telegraphy | 2 |
morse telegraphy | 2 |
| Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits. | |
| Language | Translations for "telegraphy"; alternative meanings/domain in parentheses. | |
Arabic | الإبراق. (various references) | |
Bulgarian | телеграфия. (various references) | |
Chinese | "信法. (various references) | |
Danish | telegrafi. (various references) | |
Dutch | telegrafie, telegraaf (tel., teleg., telegraph), T (metric ton, tel., teleg., temp., Temperature, Tesla, total radioactivity (cpm or dpm) added to a sample, toxic). (various references) | |
Farsi | فن تلگراف , تلگراف (Dispenser, Telegram, Telegraph, Ticker). (various references) | |
Finnish | telegrafia. (various references) | |
French | télégraphie. (various references) | |
German | Telegrafie (tel., teleg, teleg., Telegraph), Telegraphie. (various references) | |
Greek | τηλεγραφία. (various references) | |
Hungarian | táviratozás, távírás. (various references) | |
Italian | telegrafia. (various references) | |
Japanese Kanji | 無線電信 (radio telegraphy), 海底電信 (submarine telegraphy), 印刷電信 (printing telegraphy). (various references) | |
Japanese Katakana | かいていで"し" (submarine telegraphy), い"さつで"し" (printing telegraphy), むせ"で"し" (radio telegraphy). (various references) | |
Manx | chellegrafeeaght. (various references) | |
Pig Latin | elegraphytay.(various references) | |
Portuguese | telegrafia. (various references) | |
Romanian | telegrafie, telegraf (Telegraph, ticker). (various references) | |
Russian | телеграфия. (various references) | |
Serbo-Croatian | telegrafija. (various references) | |
Spanish | telegrafía. (various references) | |
Swedish | telegrafi, telegrafering. (various references) | |
Thai | เทคนิคการส่งโทรเลข. (various references) | |
Turkish | telgrafçılık. (various references) | |
Ukranian | телеграфія, телеграфування. (various references) | |
Vietnamese | thuật điện báo, phép điện báo. (various references) | |
| Source: compiled by the editor from various translation references. | ||
Derivations | |
Words ending with "telegraphy": phototelegraphy, radiotelegraphy. (additional references) | |
| |
"Telegraphy" is suggested in spellcheckers for the following: Chelgraph, telegraphe. (additional references) | |
| Source: compiled by the editor, based on several corpora (additional references). | |
| Words rhyming with "telegraphy" (pronounced 'Te*leg"ra*phy'): Adenography, Aerography, Agrostography, Aluminography, Amorphy, Anaglyptography, Anemography, Angiography, Anthography, Anthropogeography, Anthropography, Anthroposophy, Archaeography, Arteriography, Arthrography, Astrography, Astrophotography, Aurigraphy, Autobiography, Autography, Autotypography, Balneography, Bibliography, Biogeography, Biography, Brachygraphy, Cacography, Calcography, Caligraphy, Calligraphy, Cardiography, Cartography, Celidography, Cerography, Chalcography, Cheirosophy, Chemigraphy, Chirography, Choregraphy, Chorography, Chromatography, Chromolithography, Chromophotography, Chronography, Chrysography, Climatography, Cometography, Cosmography, cryptography, Crystallography, Dactyliography, Demography, Dermatography, Ectypography, Electrography, Electro-telegraphy, Embryography, Enteradenography, Enterography, Enterorrhaphy, Epidemiography, Epigraphy, Epistolography, Ethnography, Eutrophy, Exstrophy, Galvanoglyphy, Galvanography, Gastroraphy, geography, Glossography, Glyphography, Glyptography, -graphy, gymnosophy, Gypsography, hagiography, Haliography, Hemautography, Heresiography, Heterography, Hierography, Histography, Historiography, Homography, Homomorphy, Horography, Horologiography, Hyalography, hydrography, Hyetography, Hymnography, hypertrophy, Ichnography, Ichthyography, Iconography, ideography, Inorthography, Isography, lexicography, Lexigraphy, Lichenography, lithography, Lithophotography, Logography, Lymphography, Macrography, Mechanography, Metagraphy, Metallography, Meteorography, Microcosmography, Microphotography, Monography, Murphy, Myography, Neography, Neurography, Nomography, Nosography, Numismatography, Oceanography, Odontography, Oleography, Opisthography, Optography, Orchesography, Oreography, Organography, Orography, Orphanotrophy, Orthography, Oryctography, Osteography, Otography, Ouranography, Paleography, Paleontography, Pansophy, Pantography, Papyrography, Pasigraphy, Pedotrophy, Perineorrhaphy, Perspectography, Petroglyphy, Petrography, Phantasmatography, philosophy, Phonography, Photoglyphy, Photography, Photolithography, Photomicrography, Phototelegraphy, Phototopography, Phototypography, Photoxylography, Photozincography, Phycography, Physico-philosophy, Phytogeography, Phytoglyphy, Phytography, Plastography, Plethysmography, Pluviography, Pneumography, Polyautography, Polygraphy, Polymorphy, Pornography, Potamography, Psalmography, Pseudepigraphy, Pseudography, Psychography, Pterylography, Pyrography, radiography, Radiotelegraphy, Rhyparography, Scenography, Sciography, Seismography, Selenography, Siderography, Sphenography, Splanchnography, Splenography, Steganography, Stelography, stenography, Stereography, Stereotypography, Stratigraphy, Stratography, Stylography, Syndesmography, Tachygraphy, Tarsorrhaphy, Technography, telephotography, Tenorrhaphy, Testaceography, Thalassography, theosophy, thermography, topography, Toreumatography, Trachelorrhaphy, Transferography, trophy, typography, Typolithography, Uranography, Voltagraphy, Xylography, Xylopyrography, Zincography, Zoogeography, Zoography. (additional references) |
Scrabble® Enable2K-Verified Anagrams | |
| Words within the letters "a-e-e-g-h-l-p-r-t-y" | |
-1 letter: telegraph. | |
-2 letters: leathery, lethargy, pterylae. | |
-3 letters: eagerly, earthly, greatly, haltere, heeltap, lathery, leather, peartly, petrale, peytral, peytrel, pleater, preheat, prelate, prythee, pteryla, replate, telpher, therapy. | |
-4 letters: aether, argyle, eaglet, earthy, eatery, elater, elytra, ergate, galere, gather, gelate, gleety, grapey, gyrate, halter, healer, hearty, heater, helper, hereat, hyetal, lather, leaper, legate, lyrate, palter, paltry, parget, parley, partly, pearly, pelage, pelter, peltry, pertly, petrel, phylae, phylar, plater, player, raptly, realty, regale, reglet, reheat, relate, repeal, repeat, replay, retape, retype, telega, tephra, teraph, tergal, thaler, threap, threep, yelper. | |
-5 letters: aglee, aglet, agley, agree, aleph, alert, alter, apery, apter, aptly, arete, argle, artel, eager, eagle, eagre, early, earth, eater, egret, elate, elegy, etape, ether, ethyl, gaper, garth, gayer, gerah, glare, glary, gleet, glyph, grape, graph, grapy, grate, great, greet, gyral, haler, haply, harpy, hater, hayer, heart, hyper, lager, laree, large, later, lathe, lathy, layer, leapt, leary, leery, leger, leper, lepta, lethe, lyart, pager, paler, palet, parge, parle, party, pater, patly, payee, payer, peage, pearl, peart, peaty, peery, perea, petal, peter, phage, phyla, phyle, plage, plate, platy, pleat, plyer, prate, ragee, ralph, raphe, ratel, rathe, regal, relay, relet, repay, repeg, repel, reply, retag, rhyta, taler, taper, targe, teary, telae, tepal, terga, there, three, typal, yager. | |
| Words containing the letters "a-e-e-g-h-l-p-r-t-y" | |
+5 letters: electromyograph, phototelegraphy, radiotelegraphy, telegraphically, telephotography. | |
| Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits. SCRABBLE® is a registered trademark. All intellectual property rights in and to the game are owned in the U.S.A and Canada by Hasbro Inc., and throughout the rest of the world by J.W. Spear & Sons Limited of Maidenhead, Berkshire, England, a subsidiary of Mattel Inc. Mattel and Spear are not affiliated with Hasbro. | |
Hexadecimal (or equivalents, 770AD-1900s) (references)54 65 6C 65 67 72 61 70 68 79 |
| Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519; backwards) (references)
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| American Sign Language (origins from 1620-1817 in Italy and, especially, France) (references)
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| Semaphore (1791, in France) (references)
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| Braille (1829, in France) (references)
|
Morse Code (1836) (references)- . .-.. . --. .-. .- .--. .... -.--. |
| Dancing Men (Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, 1903) (references)
|
Binary Code (1918-1938, probably earlier) (references)01010100 01100101 01101100 01100101 01100111 01110010 01100001 01110000 01101000 01111001 |
HTML Code (1990) (references)T e l e g r a p h y |
ISO 10646 (1991-1993) (references)0054 0065 006C 0065 0067 0072 0061 0070 0068 0079 |
| British Sign Language (Fingerspelling, BSL; 1992, British Deaf Association Dictionary of British Sign Language) (references)
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Encryption (beginner's substitution cypher): (references)54717871738467827491 |
| 1. Definition 2. Synonyms 3. Crosswords 4. Usage: Modern | 5. Usage: Commercial 6. Images: Slideshow 7. Quotations: Historic 8. Quotations: Non-fiction | 9. Usage Frequency 10. Expressions 11. Expressions: Internet 12. Translations: Modern | 13. Derivations 14. Rhymes 15. Anagrams 16. Orthography | 17. Bibliography |
Copyright © Philip M. Parker, INSEAD. Terms of Use.