The World's Switchboard! (1932)

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  • Опубликовано: 12 апр 2014
  • Full titles read: "The World's Switchboard! The Overseas Telephone Exchange, London, is the connecting link between the telephone services of the world, and one can talk through here to 95% of the world's telephone subscribers - an amazing development."
    London.
    Various shots of women working in the Overseas Telephone Exchange; they are seen sitting at massive switchboards and putting slips of paper into little slots in a table (intertitle says these are 'slips' for 'calls', but does not explain further - perhaps they are requests for overseas calls).
    Great tracking shots along lines of women in headphones at the switchboards as we hear them babbling away in foreign languages. Signs above the boards give the names of cities overseas. We hear some dialogue between two men, one in New York and one in London; their conversation concerns where they are calling from and whether they have had lunch yet.
    A man shows us a contraption which scrambles the voices going over the telephone wires to ensure privacy for callers. Some male engineers sitting at consul boards call various cities and test for clarity of speech. A female operator places a call from Britain to Cape Town; we hear the brief conversation between two businessmen - it is all quite amazing!
    FILM ID:1052.11
    A VIDEO FROM BRITISH PATHÉ. EXPLORE OUR ONLINE CHANNEL, BRITISH PATHÉ TV. IT'S FULL OF GREAT DOCUMENTARIES, FASCINATING INTERVIEWS, AND CLASSIC MOVIES. www.britishpathe.tv/
    FOR LICENSING ENQUIRIES VISIT www.britishpathe.com/
    British Pathé also represents the Reuters historical collection, which includes more than 136,000 items from the news agencies Gaumont Graphic (1910-1932), Empire News Bulletin (1926-1930), British Paramount (1931-1957), and Gaumont British (1934-1959), as well as Visnews content from 1957 to the end of 1984. All footage can be viewed on the British Pathé website. www.britishpathe.com/

Комментарии • 9

  • @aalbas
    @aalbas 10 лет назад +19

    Thank you, London.

  • @CheshireCat6639
    @CheshireCat6639 10 месяцев назад +1

    Fabulous to watch❤..I started at the old GPO in 1975,fond memories, I loved it ❤. Ty for staring 🇬🇧Cheshire ...still best friends with my favourite little telephone engineer 50 years later ! 😉❤

  • @jasonl3445
    @jasonl3445 Год назад +1

    Amazing how technology like phone communica started off thanks for sharing!

  • @AQ-uc4bb
    @AQ-uc4bb 2 года назад +4

    Thanks for sharing

  • @thatfeeble-mindedboy
    @thatfeeble-mindedboy Год назад +3

    If anyone is curious about the origin of the name of 1/4” ‘phone plug or phone jack,’ …well, there they are.

  • @toomaskarmo9435
    @toomaskarmo9435 4 месяца назад

    Glorious. It is interesting to hear how well the radio link performed, at any rate under good ionospheric conditions. I am 80% sure that the link technology filmed here is single-sideband, for which tuning is critical: err a tiny bit in one direction, and the speech descends into basso profundo; err a bit in the other direction, and you get Donald Duck. This newsreel was released only a few years after the inauguration of commercial telephone service between New York and London, in other words at some point in the pioneering years of commercial radiotelephony.

  • @angelabangayan8399
    @angelabangayan8399 Год назад +1

    So amazing vintage video so many international ,copying america because have an insurance

  • @angelabangayan8399
    @angelabangayan8399 Год назад +1

    It's called right now Callcentre Agent new equipment provide