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Communications

Belgium Ends 19th-Century Telegram Service (bbc.com) 52

Belgium's telegram service is about to stop. From a report: One hundred and seventy-one years after the first electrical message was transmitted down a line running alongside the railway between Brussels and Antwerp the final dispatch will be sent and received on 29 December. The fact that this 19th-Century technology is still up and running in the age of Instagram and Snapchat may seem rather odd -- especially when you consider that the UK, which invented the telegram in the 1830s, abandoned it as long ago as 1982. The United States followed suit in 2006 and even India, which had been by far the world's biggest market for the telegram, finally closed its system down in 2013.
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Belgium Ends 19th-Century Telegram Service

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  • maybe in about another 100 years
  • Stop
    • Re:Stop (Score:5, Interesting)

      by jellomizer ( 103300 ) on Tuesday December 19, 2017 @01:09PM (#55769609)

      You know this sounds like a fun project for kids with a Raspberry PI. Program the PI to receive Morse code, translate it to the actual text. Send it over the internet via SSH to an end point, where it would decode the message, and play the Morse Code back onto a ticker tape writer. All the nostalgia without having dedicated cable.

  • by jabberw0k ( 62554 ) on Tuesday December 19, 2017 @11:59AM (#55769181) Homepage Journal

    Da-da did-it.

    But seriously, it is good to remember that the telegraph's current loop (with ground/earth return) was used for Teletypes; paper tape punched by these was easily stored or repeated to multiple recipients over radio or other links; Teletypes themselves were easily interfaced to early computers, and begat RS-232 and all today's serial I/O. Dig deep into any modern computer and in a way, it still talks click-clack telegraphy.

    • by mingot ( 665080 )

      Petzold wrote a neat book called 'code' that spends a lot of time on telegraphs and how the relays they used became the transistors in modern computers.

    • by chthon ( 580889 ) on Tuesday December 19, 2017 @12:21PM (#55769293) Journal
      The telegraph embodies everything that is necessary to know in modern digital electronics: transmission lines, the relationship between bandwidth and frequency, and the basis for information theory.
    • by xanthos ( 73578 )
      My college senior project involved writing a bootstrap loader, written on paper tape, for a PDP-11 that dialed up a HP3000 over a 300 baud modem to download the OS.

      Those were the days.
    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by Anonymous Coward

    How will we coordinate our counter-offensive with the rest of the world now?

  • by guruevi ( 827432 ) on Tuesday December 19, 2017 @12:29PM (#55769347)

    When I was young, telegrams were used for "instant" communication regards legal matters.

    It had guaranteed delivery, proof when it was sent and a chain of custody similar to "registered mail" in the US, I don't know of any products in the EU/Belgium that have similar guarantees, hence the need for telegrams.

    • I don't know of any products in the EU/Belgium that have similar guarantees, hence the need for telegrams.

      Registered mail exists in pretty much every country that has a mail system.

      • Registered mail isn't instant. In the US we have a similar problem with fax - it only hangs around because it's viewed as an acceptable way to send legal documents.

  • Fake News Detected (Score:5, Informative)

    by jrmcferren ( 935335 ) <robbie.mcferren@ ... .com minus berry> on Tuesday December 19, 2017 @12:31PM (#55769359) Journal

    "The United States followed suit in 2006..."

    While in 2006 Western Union stopped handling telegrams, the business was sold not discontinued.

    There are two companies providing this service. International Telegram took over the Western Union Service, but American Telegram is another company in the business.

    The official time stamp on a telegram is valid in court for purposes of contract law regardless of delivery method, in fact cancelling time share agreements is a common use of telegrams.

    Like paging, the telegram business is healthy but smaller than it once was. The service has evolved significantly with classic and contemporary entry and delivery methods.

    Telegrams can be delivered in one or more methods:

    - Traditional Hand Delivery
    - Postal Delivery
    - Telephone (an operator calls and reads the telegram to you)
    - Fax (the telegram is transmitted to your fax machine).
    - Email: Yes, even email delivery of a telegram is available. Telegrams, even if delivered by email are kept on file by the telegraph (Morse isn't used BTW) for legal verification purposes.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Like paging, the telegram business is healthy but smaller than it once was.

      Yeah, no kidding ... I know a bunch of people who still carry pagers.

      People say "why don't you just use a cell phone", but pagers work pretty much all the time, every time, and will work in places you can't get cellular. I've known teams who have switched entirely to smart phone apps, and pretty much every one has missed oodles of calls and missed SLAs.

      The reason these things have lasted as long as they have is they work, and they s

  • by Anonymous Coward

    The fact that this 19th-Century technology is still up and running in the age of Instagram and Snapchat may seem rather odd

    See, unlike Instagram and Snapchat, 19th century technology solved the problem it needed to, and ran reliably for decades.

    In 2-5 years, I bet one or both of Snapchat and Instagram will not exist either.

    All you whiny fucking millennials may think you're the pinnacle of civilization, but mostly you're about pointless toys and distractions to feed your shallow, narcissistic lives ... I me

    • In 2-5 years, I bet one or both of Snapchat and Instagram will not exist either.

      I'll take that bet for any amount, but you won't put up.

      I think you're too busy bitching about millennials to realize how big these products have gotten. They might not be the hottest thing on the block in 5 years, but they'll exist. See Sears and Myspace.

  • Still alive (Score:4, Informative)

    by enriquevagu ( 1026480 ) on Tuesday December 19, 2017 @12:40PM (#55769415)

    That's funny, because telegrams are still alive [correos.es] in Spain. They still charge per words.

    As mentioned in previous comments, telegrams are still alive in many parts of the world (including the US, despite what's in the article) and they are used for legal reasons, in cases in which registered delivery is required.

  • Alas I guess we will just have to revert to optical semaphores [wikipedia.org] to manipulate the financial markets of a European country [wikipedia.org] to ruin our personal enimies.
  • cables you need cash STOP my office instructed to advance you up to 25000 dollars STOP hee haw and merry christmas sam wainwright

  • Or, I imagine, Ken Thompson when he developed "ed" [wikipedia.org].

    From TFA:

    No-one could rival Oscar Wilde for brevity. He is said to have once asked his publisher how a book was doing, by telegraphing simply "?". To which the publisher replied enigmatically "!"

    • That rivals the rumored Ernest Hemingway short story: "For sale: Baby shoes. Never worn."

      “Brevity" said Shakespeare, "is the soul of wit.” (Hamlet)
  • Still much-lamented in the UK - the 'Best Man' reads telegrams at the wedding - how? My parents got engaged by telegram. When you're 100, the Queen 'sends you a telegram' (now it's just a cheesy card). Sic transit gloria mundi.
  • alles hat an Ende....nur die Wurst hat zwei! [youtube.com]
  • I wish I could be there to send or receive one of the last telegrams.

  • The last message should be something like "What hath God wrought" [americaslibrary.gov], or an anagram [wordsmith.org] of that like "Oh. Thwart what God hug".
  • I still use it to connect to my IRC gateway
  • BELGIUM STOP

Ocean: A body of water occupying about two-thirds of a world made for man -- who has no gills. -- Ambrose Bierce

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