Learning telegraphy, he worked in various midwestern cities as a telegraph and presswire operator. |
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Samuel Finley Breese Morse invented the Morse system of telegraphy in the 1840s in the United States. |
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In this function it is a significant incremental improvement to pre-existing telegraphy and telephony. |
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These were all blameless cases of unintentional and unwitting mental telegraphy, I judge. |
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It were not just telegraph lines and telegraphy which he brought to South Australia. |
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The text, which describes the Daniell cell and other early batteries, comes from an 1871 book about telegraphy. |
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The counter employee took messages, which were telephoned to the main telegraphy office in Manchester. |
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Without the discoveries, inventions, and theories of these abstract scientific men telegraphy, as it now is, would be impossible. |
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The development of telegraphy also brought immediacy to the content of newspapers that had not been possible before. |
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The origins of marine geology lie in the development of submarine telegraphy in the latter half of the nineteenth century. |
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I suppose it could be said that Samuel Morse had shown that electric telegraphy could be done. |
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As things turned out, railways and telegraphy made things easier for the police, too. |
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It was the advent of telegraphy that started the most important shift towards full blown globalisation in the 1840s, and in the process invented news and hence the mass media. |
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In 1918 he patented a generator which converted mechanical energy into high frequency electric currents which could be used for wireless telegraphy. |
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Technological progress then gave us Morse code telegraphy and the use of teletype machines. |
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Thanks to rail transport and telegraphy, it was possible for him to oversee the war on a day-to-day basis without leaving Washington. |
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His work and discoveries were behind wireless telegraphy, X-rays, radar, radio and television. |
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It was an academic course on the basic subjects of aeronautics, that is, dealing with aeroplanes and the engines and also wireless telegraphy. |
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The Goodwin Sands lightships are to be put in communication with the shore by means of wireless telegraphy and the installation is to be completed in about a month. |
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From here the visitors were taken outside to the railway siding where railway trucks would deliver the raw materials and despatch the completed wireless telegraphy equipment. |
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Satellite and digital technology has replaced Morse Code telegraphy for commercial ships, and recreational boaters will be able to take full advantage of the changes. |
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Submarine telegraphy had become a major practical problem of the day. |
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In 1851, the telegraphy service between London and Paris began operating. |
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Around 1912, Johnson had his first experience with electronics when his half brother, Charlie Nelson, strung lines between two neighborhood houses for Morse telegraphy. |
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In an era when battlefield telegraphy was impractical, sound was the primary means by which commanders grasped what was happening on the battlefield. |
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As a result, the commercial space revolution has less in common with the rise of the steamship or the airliner than with the invention of telegraphy or radio. |
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Baum cast about and found... wireless telegraphy. |
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Installation services of line telegraphy equipment. |
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What is it, and where did it come from ASCII's spiritual predecessor might have been ancient Assyrian, but it is a direct descendant of Baudot code, a scheme patented by Émile Baudot in 1874 for use in telegraphy. |
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The newspaper column as we kno it is an artifact of telegraphy. |
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Beginning as a supplier to the Black Forest watch industry, at the end of the 19th century Siedle turned into the German pioneer of telegraphy and telephony. |
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Unlike telegraphy, telephony required no technical skill on the part of the operators, so the companies fired the technician-operators and hired new apprentices. |
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And some people, it soon transpired, had a natural facility for Morse code. As electric telegraphy took off in the early 1850s, the Morse telegraph quickly became dominant. |
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In 1879, Leggo withdrew from printing and moved to Lachute, Quebec, where he continued to file patents for various interests, including telegraphy. |
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The British Raj invested heavily in infrastructure, including canals and irrigation systems in addition to railways, telegraphy, roads and ports. |
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Meanwhile, Elisha Gray was also experimenting with acoustic telegraphy and thought of a way to transmit speech using a water transmitter. |
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Time signals were first broadcast by wireless telegraphy in 1904, by the US Navy from Navy Yard in Boston. |
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In the process, she reconstructs how mobile media have been created subsequent to technologies such as optic telegraphy, electric telephony and radio technology. |
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Repair and maintenance services of line telegraphy equipment. |
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Electrical apparatus for line telephony or line telegraphy. |
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In order to dramatize the potential of this new medium of communication, he began, as early as 1902, to give public demonstrations of wireless telegraphy for businessmen, the press, and the military. |
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It is responsible for wireless telegraphy licensing throughout the islands, and by agreement, for broadcasting regulation in the two large islands only. |
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With financial support from Sanders and Hubbard, Bell hired Thomas Watson as his assistant, and the two of them experimented with acoustic telegraphy. |
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Trained as a shorthand typist, she volunteered to be trained in wireless telegraphy and was stationed in Scarborough, where she worked at the 'Y' station for two years. |
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Other new inventions were electrical telegraphy and the telephone. |
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However, having perfected the device to his own satisfaction, he turned to the problem of wireless telegraphy and did not develop the electric light any further. |
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