Facsimile
http://it-so-happened-it-so-happened.blogspot.com/2010/08/Facsimile.hyml
We wanted to make an early start to arrive in time to take delivery of our car from the Mercedes-Benz Factory in Sidelfingen. Getting up early to do so signified our desire to enjoy every minute of such a day. The breakfast served to us offered a great selection, and we had ample intake to keep us going. Lavinia was excited to take possession of a car that will drive us through many countries to reach Iran.
Staying overnight at Holiday Inn was quite comfortable and refreshing. It was made possible with help from Leon, our brother-in-law, in England. He booked reservation at Holiday Inn by facsimile mail. As a well-established business executive in London, he had been already using it for his transactions wherever such a facility was available in Europe.
Facsimile mailing was still in its early stages at the start of our travel. We were impressed with the rapidity in receiving written confirmation of our forthcoming stay in Stuttgart. And especially so when an unexpected change was required because of a directive from Rome asking me to arrive a day earlier to attend a briefing session organized for those undertaking FAO assignments in other countries.
"It is so immediate and convenient," said Lavinia. I agreed and warmly nodded my affirmation.
In stead of making phone calls at different times from widely separated global locations, facsimile mail provided a trust-worthy communication technique of sending letters for exact reproduction elsewhere. We were intrigued and pleased how a fax (short for facsimile) could send a document over telephone lines.
The history of the facsimile was started with the invention in Scotland. It was 1842when Alexander Bain, Scottish clockmaker, made a machine that could receive signals from a telegraph wire and translate these into images on paper.
Facsimile machines existed in different forms since the 19th century. Modern fax machines became feasible only in the mid-1970s, with sophistication of technology and lower cost. Newspaper publishers and TV broadcasters had employed the first facsimile machines for transmitting photographs.
Japan presented a problem in using the competing technologies such as teleprinter. As it was faster to handwrite the Japanese language characters than to type them, a facsimile had clear advantage. Due to the unique requirements of the Japanese markets, facsimile machines had great potential in the country.
Japan successfully managed to lower the production costs through advanced technology, and soon led the world in the utilization of facsimile service. In the 1970s, there was rapid innovation in the facsimile industry and many standards were set.
Initially, government agencies were the prime users. Japan was the first to allow facsimile transmission over public telephone system in 1972, and in early 1970s the Japanese government was also one of the first to give facsimile documents legal approval.
Over time, faxing has gradually became affordable, and by the mid-1980s fax machines became smaller and compact and very popular around the world.
Life is a journey. While performing daily chores, there are opportunities to travel to different places within our own country or in different parts of the world. In doing so we meet interesting people and share views and experiences that link us together as human beings. I have been fortunate to enjoy my travels, some as a part of my duty as a scientist to present research reports or as a United Nations expert to offer help, and also just to travel for pleasure and relaxation.
Recreational Mecca
Sunday, August 15, 2010
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This is how the modern fax machines started and developed, especially in Japan and elsewhere.
ReplyDeleteMay I suggest that you go to the Blog site and read it from the very start.
ReplyDeleteBest wishes, Teja
I had heard a while back that fax machines were as common as telephones in Japan.
ReplyDelete