1930s How Photographs Were Transmitted by Wire: Spot News (1937) - CharlieDeanArchives

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  • Опубликовано: 1 окт 2024
  • Dramatization of how photographs are transmitted by wire, an exciting new technology in the 1930s. .
    CharlieDeanArchives - Archive footage from the 20th century making history come alive!

Комментарии • 3 тыс.

  • @stormthrush37
    @stormthrush37 Год назад +6012

    Explaining how this works with a picture printed on rope is actually a really great analogy!

    • @Binary_Omlet
      @Binary_Omlet Год назад +207

      Yep! It could even be extended to how 3d printing works too. These old films always make the best examples to get an idea across!

    • @AudioJellyfish
      @AudioJellyfish Год назад +29

      "Like putting too much air in a balloon"

    • @newp0rt
      @newp0rt Год назад +13

      this entire video was explained like the viewer is a mentally impaired 4 year old. aint no way it took 9 whole minutes to explain this damn.

    • @plixplop
      @plixplop Год назад +60

      Some of these old technical film reels had really clever analog methods of explaining concepts like this. Very cool!

    • @starstencahl8985
      @starstencahl8985 Год назад +177

      @@newp0rt Show some respect. This film is great, it brings across the subject perfectly. And it’s made for anyone to understand. Ever thought about the average level of technical education in the 1930s? How’s anyone without any prior knowledge going to understand you, when all you do is speak in fancy technical terms because you want to sound intellectual. There’s no use for that in a basic film for all audiences like this

  • @gitpusher2400
    @gitpusher2400 Год назад +1140

    I’m always amazed at the quality of these old-school educational videos. They somehow manage to distill complex topics into something that’s approachable for the layperson, but without missing any important technical details. I wish we had videos like this for every topic!

    • @percthirtington4588
      @percthirtington4588 Год назад +29

      Bro right? I'm dumb asf and I understand this concisely

    • @afirdaus068
      @afirdaus068 Год назад +2

      Agree!

    • @seanshapuron
      @seanshapuron Год назад

      person who is not in the profession

    • @rangerjones5531
      @rangerjones5531 Год назад +19

      Schools today would have to put the information in a rap video or kids won’t watch....there are students who graduated high school and can’t read or write worth a damn, and they give them a diploma 🐵🍌

    • @SixthyGTi
      @SixthyGTi Год назад

      Exactly my thoughts...

  • @bridgecross
    @bridgecross Год назад +1957

    I like how the newsman pulls up, a total stranger, and he's already on a first-name basis with the stunt team. Back in those days, there were only about 73 people in the world, so everybody knew everybody.

    • @bakatoroi
      @bakatoroi Год назад +214

      73 people in the western world.
      The rest of the world hadn't discovered numbers yet so there are no official figures but it's estimated there were around 2000, maybe more in Antarctica.

    • @kidkique
      @kidkique Год назад +115

      Yes but the cameraman may have gotten there before the cameraman who was shooting the cameraman so by the time the cameraman's cameraman got there the cameraman may have already met the stunt pilot

    • @aaronjaben7913
      @aaronjaben7913 Год назад +60

      that's ridiculous. there were at least 100

    • @shawnalfaro6943
      @shawnalfaro6943 Год назад +82

      and those people all wore suits.

    • @bridgecross
      @bridgecross Год назад +51

      @@shawnalfaro6943 and fedora hats when appropriate

  • @Helix_22
    @Helix_22 Год назад +654

    Can we all agree that their animations back then were on point.

    • @AndrewTSq
      @AndrewTSq Год назад +9

      I was just as amazed by the animations as how they did this back in the day.

    • @goldenhippie6352
      @goldenhippie6352 Год назад +16

      What are you talking about? On average people back then had way more intelligence than anyone today.

    • @AndrewTSq
      @AndrewTSq Год назад +4

      @@goldenhippie6352 not sure who you reply to, and none of the people you could reply to sad anything about people being dumb back then..

    • @oh_knee7173
      @oh_knee7173 Год назад

      @@goldenhippie6352 this is true the more lead we are exposed to the lower asre iqs are geting we dumb

    • @goldenhippie6352
      @goldenhippie6352 Год назад +2

      @@AndrewTSq to the guy who deleted his text after I called him out obviously

  • @marcoscorsolini8803
    @marcoscorsolini8803 Год назад +237

    I am always amazed at the amount of work required to make such videos. The drawings, the animations, the orchestra live recorded...

    • @georgehill3087
      @georgehill3087 Год назад +13

      On top of those, they actually sent somebody to fly that plane, had somebody on top of the car to take the photo, another car to film the plane and the news car, and made an actual newspaper.

    • @elFulberto
      @elFulberto Год назад +6

      @@georgehill3087 and somebody manufactured that rope spool thing to illustrate how the scanning works.

  • @embracethesuck1041
    @embracethesuck1041 Год назад +4036

    The mechanical analogs that were used to explain these concepts are incredible. Simple, yet illuminating.

    • @kennethellison9713
      @kennethellison9713 Год назад +112

      The reel of string example was fantastic.

    • @veryboringname.
      @veryboringname. Год назад +49

      Literally illuminating.

    • @MrVirus9898
      @MrVirus9898 Год назад +113

      I love the old videos and how they explain things. They really assumed nothing of the viewer, but also, did not treat the viewer like they were dumb. Really was intended for an audience who, honestly, the most advanced tech they were familiar with was Radio.

    • @km077
      @km077 Год назад +12

      Haha, 'illuminating', you, sir, are a bright individual. I wanted to highlight the same- these old demonstrations are so well explained you get a bulb lighted above your head constantly.

    • @mabx-zl9gv
      @mabx-zl9gv Год назад +6

      simple and brilliant. 🤔

  • @jorik41
    @jorik41 Год назад +857

    This makes the invention of the tv seem like a very natural progression of the technology of the day.
    -Sending pictures via signal
    - the principle of moving pictures using individual pictures
    - cathode ray tube to display signals.
    - radio for broadcasting signals.
    - electronic speakers and vacuumetube amplifiers
    It was all they just needed to combine it and make it of course faster and more efficient.

    • @SeanOfEarth
      @SeanOfEarth Год назад +60

      Except for the fact that Baird demonstrated television more than a decade before this

    • @jarivuorinen3878
      @jarivuorinen3878 Год назад +54

      @@SeanOfEarth Yes. But it's not merely about technology existing, it's about adopting that technology and investing into it to make it widespread enough to be useful. So it has to be relatively cheap, reliable and widespread to be useful. This requires engineering, optimizing and marketing, then producing the devices and teaching the protocols to everyone involved and whatnot.

    • @DrBovdin
      @DrBovdin Год назад +19

      The telefacsimile was actually a quite mature technique by the 1930s, but it would indeed remain a specialist niche for some time.
      I am uncertain as to if it was a novelty to be able to use any telephone line, but it must have come across as quite futuristic for the general populace, who were not specifically interested in electronics and other technology.

    • @SeanOfEarth
      @SeanOfEarth Год назад +5

      @@jarivuorinen3878 it's about the order of operations.
      You cannot use this technology to invent something that already exists.

    • @jarivuorinen3878
      @jarivuorinen3878 Год назад +10

      @@SeanOfEarth Of course not. I agree with you that the system shown in the video wasn't the first time pictures or photos were transfered through phone lines or any photonic or electric medium, there were working systems before this. What I meant by my comment is that the implementation of this system did require much more than merely understanding the technology behind it. It was the 1930's after all, funding being the key word here

  • @albear972
    @albear972 Год назад +703

    That was an absolutely genius visual demonstration of the photo fax. And while the photographer was taking the pictures under very questionable conditions, he didn't lose his hat.

    • @JB-yb4wn
      @JB-yb4wn Год назад +62

      Well they had really good hat tech back then.

    • @FloppyDorito
      @FloppyDorito Год назад +65

      That's because losing your hat in the 30s was like losing your phone.

    • @xylfox
      @xylfox Год назад +2

      But his head when too near on the propeller😅

    • @buttyboy100
      @buttyboy100 Год назад +18

      The darkroom in the back of the van appeared to be very effectively stabilised as the staff were not at all bothered by the movement of the van over the dirt road.😂

    • @stoopidbastid6420
      @stoopidbastid6420 Год назад +2

      Staples

  • @TrasherBiner
    @TrasherBiner Год назад +120

    I find amazing that they had the building blocks of a modem , scanning analogically light reflected, coded into the phone and then printed it in a negative. In 1937 no less. This must have been absolutely ridiculously expensive machinery back then.

    • @megatesla
      @megatesla Год назад +22

      Photosensitive tubes and the rest of the electronics were available and probably not that expensive. I think the biggest challenge was to get a good phone line and get the timing correct.

    • @TrasherBiner
      @TrasherBiner Год назад +11

      @@megatesla You raise an important point. I am not that old, but I grew up in the 80's and I remember how noisy phone lines were. This was a challenge even in the dialup and DSL era (and before that the BBS era... pre internet).

    • @georgehill3087
      @georgehill3087 Год назад +16

      @@TrasherBiner It's why they asked for a line with no traffic to transfer that. I wonder how much that one wire cost.

    • @FlorenceSlugcat
      @FlorenceSlugcat Год назад +1

      @@georgehill3087s does not apply as much here. The first phone lines capable of carrying multiple calls at once came around the 1950s, with a capacity of 24.
      Before there, there was a two-calls technology that would quickly switch between two calls and only send you your call.
      And there was also another technology called the party line, where a few household next to eachother would share the same phone line. Each house would have a different ringtone for people to know who is being called, and in some cases, you could hear your neighbours talking if you picked up your phone.
      So in this context, an unreserved line really only refers to a line that is not currently in use by a single caller, by two callers in alternation, or by something like 4 households(add or remove 1 or so, it could vary a bit)
      Reserving a line like that would come at a cost of about the cost fairly similar to a normal call, likely a little more to ensure it is a clean line. Maybe up to four times that cost, which would match up against a party line.
      Starting in the 50s, this cost would have significantly increased as sudently lines began transitioning from carrying one caller or party line to 24 lines.
      To increase a line’s capacity at the time, carriers simply bundled multiple cables into a single bigger cable. So you could have had a big cable with a dozen small cables in it, each carrying one caller or party, and one phone call at a time each. That is what they would be reserving. Not the big cable. Just a small one in there.
      This method of bundling cables is still used today. A fiber cable, no matter what, is still limited by how many different wavelenghts it can carry. And how much data it can carry. The difference is that now, each of thoses small cables each carry multiple calls

    • @percussion44
      @percussion44 Год назад +6

      Look up how sound was added to movies back in the day. Very similar. The audio is encoded photonically in the film!

  • @sawilliams
    @sawilliams 2 года назад +2978

    we are so spoiled now

    • @gustavgnoettgen
      @gustavgnoettgen Год назад +113

      Hey, we're watching such pics right now

    • @davidjosh5640
      @davidjosh5640 Год назад +128

      By design…play with all the shiny toys, pay no attention to the men behind the curtain!

    • @FirstnameLastname-py3bc
      @FirstnameLastname-py3bc Год назад +53

      Apparently not in cars department, even most of off-roaders will fall apart on a road like that runaway

    • @enedenedubedene4811
      @enedenedubedene4811 Год назад +20

      1930!!!!!!! Kaum zu glauben.👆👆👆👆👆😃😃😃😃 Viele Grüsse aus Germany

    • @CrymsonNite
      @CrymsonNite Год назад +20

      Bet they made more money back then.

  • @killosama72
    @killosama72 Год назад +801

    I am blown away....I had no idea this was possible...especially in the 1930s.
    Absolutely incredible a 1930s modem.

    • @Bartooc
      @Bartooc Год назад +61

      First use of fax was in 1860, so this 80 years old video was already 70 years behind.

    • @KCJazzKeys
      @KCJazzKeys Год назад +40

      That’s cool, but can it play “Doom”?

    • @UrianErreErre
      @UrianErreErre Год назад +1

      ​@@KCJazzKeys Maybe

    • @Eduardo_Espinoza
      @Eduardo_Espinoza Год назад +2

      It's like a magic trick

    • @ghostsofnormmacdonald2446
      @ghostsofnormmacdonald2446 Год назад +9

      @@KCJazzKeys I got a phonograph to play Duke Nukem 3D so anything's possible!

  • @k_a_bizzle
    @k_a_bizzle Год назад +12

    “Will he make it? It’ll make a good picture either way.”
    Glad to see things have never changed.

  • @Mostlyharmless1985
    @Mostlyharmless1985 Год назад +530

    What's interesting to me is this is still pretty much EXACTLY how it works today. Shine a light on something, measure what's reflected back, convert it to a signal.

    • @BringDHouseDown
      @BringDHouseDown Год назад +22

      the part that I don't get is how it is converted into a signal and how that's interpreted, how the devices work to interpret those electrons or why there's even a higher or lower current based on the light input, what are the materials made out of that react that way, what the heck is a neon tube, so many questions.

    • @JB-yb4wn
      @JB-yb4wn Год назад +15

      @@BringDHouseDown
      It was almost the same technology that gave you "talkies". A selenium band ran on the side of the film. Selenium is light sensitive, so when you play a sound loudly, the device reflecting onto the selenium metal would emit more light the light would be then translated into a sound by a speaker that would read the contrasts of the selenium metal.
      The signal here is sent as a pulse, instead of light, it is a flow of electrons. Think of it as a record player. The reflections of light are turned into a light or dark pulse that are zoomed down a line and put together at the other end like the string diagram showed. What the light is broadcasting is the contrasts of grey.
      Neon are the lights that you see in outdoor display signs, they are usually tubular, mostly used for the "open" signs.
      Amazing that they had this level of technology back in the thirties.

    • @nkag545
      @nkag545 Год назад +5

      @@BringDHouseDown Checkout photoelectric effect

    • @mrben9000
      @mrben9000 Год назад +6

      ​@@BringDHouseDown More light, more energy. More energy = more electricity.
      Same when converting back to light.
      today, almost all electronics are digital and therefore send series of 1s and 0s. Much more complicated but same principle.

    • @cool3865
      @cool3865 Год назад +3

      pretty much how LD/CD/DVD/HD-DVD/Blueray all work

  • @computer_toucher
    @computer_toucher Год назад +214

    These old instructional videos could well be shown in classrooms today. Especially the 1940's Military training videos. Explaining concepts in such intuitive ways, in detail.

  • @nagualdesign
    @nagualdesign Год назад +1068

    What I found most impressive is the large rooms with ample headroom that fit inside the back of that small van, and how stable it was while the van was still moving along at speed on a bumpy track.
    I guess the men inside the van were very small and the van had a state-of-the-art suspension.

    • @JohnGrishHam
      @JohnGrishHam Год назад +83

      Also how the mans hat stayed on while taking pictures from the top of a moving car

    • @autophyte
      @autophyte Год назад +177

      That's just the point they were trying to make subliminally - that the new Chevrolet panel vans have extraordinarily good suspension. These Jam Handy films were commissioned by General Motors to promote Chevrolet. As to the small man - well, they just hoped you wouldn't notice.

    • @thedave7760
      @thedave7760 Год назад +31

      @@JohnGrishHam Didn't you see he had his leg under the top bar of the roof rack to make sure he wouldn't go flying off.

    • @sir.richardarmstrong3rd759
      @sir.richardarmstrong3rd759 Год назад +13

      I guess they just don’t make things the way they use to 😂🤣😂🤣

    • @OneAdam12Adam
      @OneAdam12Adam Год назад +32

      @@sir.richardarmstrong3rd759 They don't. People are too cheap to pay for things made with quality materials and quality craftsmanship.

  • @josemolina566
    @josemolina566 Год назад +838

    As a telecomunications engineer with image processing background and photographer enthusiast, I cannot overstate how much I enjoyed this video. Finally RUclips's algorithm nails it with me. People that worked on this have already passed, but if they had not and I got to meet them I would definitely behave as a damned groupie.

    • @nuassul
      @nuassul Год назад +5

      Ahora si dio lo mejor de lo mejor este algoritmo recomendando algo que si vale la pena ver :D

    • @StegoMan
      @StegoMan Год назад +5

      Te pasa como a mi Jose, llevo 15 años en ingeniería de telecomunicaciones y más de 25 años haciendo fotos... este vídeo es genial

    • @Ciervorelajado
      @Ciervorelajado Год назад +4

      This trend os “as a [insert topic related profession]” is so narcissistic…

    • @StegoMan
      @StegoMan Год назад +4

      @@Ciervorelajado cómo??

    • @ceoatcrystalsoft4942
      @ceoatcrystalsoft4942 Год назад +11

      @@StegoMan he's just jealous

  • @A2YU09
    @A2YU09 Год назад +26

    I work as a printer technician,the process in which this is achieved,using electricity,a drum and light to produce an image is almost similar in the way a laser printer operates,really cool stuff to see and admirable.

    • @justmayo6097
      @justmayo6097 Год назад +1

      Super interesting stuff (:

    • @kikuchu.
      @kikuchu. Год назад +1

      Fellow printer tech here as well, I was thinking the same exact thing while watching this! 🤘

  • @kaptainkaos1202
    @kaptainkaos1202 Год назад +232

    What’s so funny is when I was 12 I attempted to build a system like this, almost 50 years ago. I had to spend many hours at the library reading about the system. I never could get the resolution they had but it was a good try. Years later I hacked a fax machine so I could connect it to my computer and use it as a scanner. I’m such a dork.

    • @BlondieSL
      @BlondieSL Год назад +50

      I'm also the inventor type with many inventions to my name.
      I used to get upset when something failed.
      But a very good friend of mine, who worked with NASA, said the most brilliant thing to me that has stuck with me all these years.
      He said, "it's not impressive how well the dancing bear dances, but that the bear dances at all."
      So true. Every effort we make, successful or a failure, has lessons that were learned.

    • @arbjful
      @arbjful Год назад +5

      @@BlondieSL that’s sublime

    • @SeekingTheLoveThatGodMeans7648
      @SeekingTheLoveThatGodMeans7648 Год назад +4

      I'd expect more problems with optics, reproducers, and sensors than with the rest of the electronics.

    • @colt-_-jonson1743
      @colt-_-jonson1743 Год назад +2

      look up "oney plays saints row reboot" and go to the part where they introduce the "characters" and just think about the waffle guy.

    • @soonersciencenerd383
      @soonersciencenerd383 Год назад +1

      @@BlondieSL at least you tried.

  • @BikeArea
    @BikeArea Год назад +191

    I can't emphasize enough the quality of the animations. 😮 This kind of visualization is outstandingly well done and I wouldn't know how to replicate it nowadays without the use of computers. 🥴

    • @sarowie
      @sarowie Год назад +14

      the crazy part is, that the illustration could - with just a few changes - be used to show how analog TV works. All it needs is a sync signal that can be illustrated and created by a metal strip (very bright signal) for each line and end of frame.

    • @RustOnWheels
      @RustOnWheels Год назад +4

      @@sarowie In this technique a sync signal is also very much needed though, otherwise start, end and speed could be way off, creating skewed or even randomlike patterns. They did not mention it but I guess a pilot tone was sent along. They also didn’t mention if that time we heard was the signal and if it was the amplitude modulation that seemed to occur was the light modulator.
      I’m too lazy to look this all up on Google, just mentioning it here 😂

    • @KJ-kw7gh
      @KJ-kw7gh Год назад +9

      Old visual demonstrations are the best. I’ve watched some on here about different automobile systems and it makes understanding very intuitive.

    • @sevenspec
      @sevenspec Год назад +3

      ​@@KJ-kw7gh there are many differences between 50s education and that of today... That is unless pronouns interest you...

    • @dsprocks
      @dsprocks Год назад +2

      ​@@sevenspecYeah it's like society seemed to be going in a good direction with value being placed on being well groomed, dressed, and educated, then one day they decided that makes people too free too hard to lie to and manipulate and started intentionally dumbing down society.

  • @michaeldonnelly2977
    @michaeldonnelly2977 Год назад +23

    The creators & animators of these educational videos back in the day really were talented at explaining complex topics to the average person. I’ve watched a bunch of these videos on everything from how electricity works to how to behave in the military, and I’m very impressed with their quality.

  • @crooker2
    @crooker2 Год назад +62

    It's really amazing to think just how much physical effort went into creating a newspaper back in the day. And they did it every day... Day after day... For decades.
    It's no wonder that the newspaper was the frontline in news until television took over.

    • @MattExzy
      @MattExzy Год назад +1

      Looking back at the newspaper, they must have been magical at the time.

  • @geoffbarratt2732
    @geoffbarratt2732 Год назад +215

    I was stunned to see the mouthpiece being used as the receiver from the scanner to become the transmitter, and the guy climbing the Telepone pole to connect up. it been so long since we had analogue modems using the phone line like that. we are so lucky living with the results of the pioneers . Great clip

    • @Thirdbase9
      @Thirdbase9 Год назад +5

      One of the earliest mobile phones.

    • @downundarob
      @downundarob Год назад +10

      Fax machines work in the same principle

    • @kidkique
      @kidkique Год назад +3

      This is just the beginning too! we're still in the baby steps when it comes to information technology

    • @DavidMcCoul
      @DavidMcCoul Год назад +2

      Well said!

    • @almostfm
      @almostfm Год назад +3

      I know that up through a good part of the 1980s, you could see the byline "AP Wirephoto" on pictures in the paper (I'm sure UPI had something similar, but our local paper primarily worked with AP

  • @Fishwithadeagle
    @Fishwithadeagle Год назад +22

    Just the sheer ability to translate electronics to physical explanation is absolutely amazing in these films.

  • @OperationPitbull
    @OperationPitbull 2 года назад +200

    I’m here after watching Walter Cronkite announce the death of JFK. He showed a picture that was wired to their NYC studio shortly after JFK’s death and I was intrigued. Growing up with the internet, I was unaware that wired photo transmission has been around for so long. I saw the photo Cronkite held up and was like… wait.. Cronkite just said JFK was just shot and here he is holding up a picture of the shooting before JFK was pronounced dead by his doctors! How?! Well.. now I know. I am guessing wiring photos lead to the development of the fax machine. Very interesting stuff.

    • @Cheesemonk3h
      @Cheesemonk3h Год назад +13

      television was a fully functional technology in the 1920s. mechanical television was limited to 50 lines or so instead of 400 but it worked. the technology they give to the public as toys to placate them and manipulate them is years behind what is known to be possible.

    • @tjmarx
      @tjmarx Год назад +15

      Most things zoomer think are new, are just iterations of old tech or existing societal norms. You stand on the shoulders of giants.

    • @mavigogun
      @mavigogun Год назад +30

      @@Cheesemonk3h Ah, yes- every circumstance can be viewed as a nefarious conspiracy. Must be rough.

    • @dfirth224
      @dfirth224 Год назад +4

      Yes, this is where the fax machine came from. This is also how analog TV works. Before wire photo was invented newspapers only had local pictures.

    • @MildMisanthropeMaybeMassive
      @MildMisanthropeMaybeMassive Год назад +13

      The fax machine predates the telephone. It just didn't become widely used until a century later outside of some major organizations.

  • @jishcatg
    @jishcatg Год назад +35

    Did it seem to anyone else like the inside of the van was bigger than the outside?

  • @MadameSomnambule
    @MadameSomnambule Год назад +9

    When he mentioned light scanning the image, I immediately thought of how modern day scanners work. It's amazing how they thought of how to send electronic scans of photos all the way back then before digital computers were capable of displaying graphics (or even before it existed). It kinda is like faxing in the way we know it today.

  • @bloxxberg
    @bloxxberg Год назад +39

    the video also outstanding on an educational level. complex stuff made easy to undertand. well done grand grand grand pa!

  • @TheOriginalJphyper
    @TheOriginalJphyper Год назад +67

    What's really crazy is that the ability to send pictures over wire was already over 90 years old when this film came out. The first fax machine was invented for telegraph lines in 1846.

    • @FrancescoDedo
      @FrancescoDedo Год назад +2

      I was thinking that it could be a positive effect of our residual pareidolia. We see patterns in stuff, like telegraph signals. Dots and lines forming, i don't know, a face or a cat, or something like that. Maybe a somewhat creative telegraph user tried to create a picture out of morse signals, like a 19th century emoticon. Next thing you know, engineers are creating the fax and the television out of a lateral thinking event mixed with an ancestral instinct.

    • @TheOriginalJphyper
      @TheOriginalJphyper Год назад +1

      @@FrancescoDedo Don't believe me? Google it. Don't make assumptions like that. I'm not making this stuff up.

    • @rossbrumby1957
      @rossbrumby1957 Год назад +4

      @@TheOriginalJphyper I have a copy of The London Journal 1848 which has an article of the first fax machine to be effectively reliable and put to practical use. Numerous others were working on the idea beforehand, but not very practical or easy to use.

    • @g.b.macfuddson2143
      @g.b.macfuddson2143 Год назад +6

      ​@@rossbrumby1957 They never said commercially viable or particularly useful, but Alexander Bain did develop a chemical method for sending images between 1843 and 1846. It used a pair of synchronized pendulums as transmitter and receiver. The image actually had to be transferred to a copper plate as lines, which the pendulum could 'scan' as it swung past. The receiver worked by passing the corresponding current from the transmission through a chemically treated paper, which would darken it to show an image. I am guessing your source is referring to Bakewell's work, which followed the same idea as Bain but used a much more practical set of paired rotating cylinders instead of the pendulums. He got a lot of credit after demonstrating a working setup at the 1851 World's Fair, and the 1848 date comes from when he first had a working prototype.
      Both designs were fairly limited, able to transmit handwriting and simple line images, which is why you also see others credited with inventing the fax machine in later years.

  • @skybluescholar
    @skybluescholar Год назад +27

    these old 1930s archive tape do a better job of explaining things than most teachers do today

    • @osco4311
      @osco4311 Год назад +3

      That's a benefit of having an entire team of people looking over scripts, supplemental images, and production, versus one person trying to teach a subject they're not necessarily an expert on.

    • @JayGee6996
      @JayGee6996 Год назад +1

      @@osco4311plus they’re teaching one topic which the viewers are interested in as they’ve clicked on the video. Try teaching 5 whole courses that at least 50% of the audience have no interest in..

  • @jdnelms62
    @jdnelms62 Год назад +51

    I worked in at a newspaper right out of college in the late 1980's. The analog technology was still essentially the same, only most newsrooms had a wire service department, with dedicated phone lines, teletypes and photo-facsimile machines running 24-hours a day, for each of the wire services such as AP, Knight Ridder and UPI. It was not unusual to see a wire baskets under each of the photo-facsimile machine and teletypes, to catch the prints as they tumbled out all day. Editors looking for interesting non-local filler stories would read through the teletypes and sift through the piles of photos every day.

  • @michaelc.3812
    @michaelc.3812 Год назад +241

    I’m an electrical engineer, and I’m impressed by this early tech.

    • @arbjful
      @arbjful Год назад +11

      They don’t teach you this stuff in college?

    • @volo870
      @volo870 Год назад

      I am quite surprised that the signal is not amplitude modulated audio. On the contrary - it is depicted as a continuous stream of low frequency brightness value.
      Shouldn't telephone lines filter out low frequencies?

    • @kapralas
      @kapralas Год назад +3

      ​@@arbjful why would they

    • @bobsmoth-iv3sp
      @bobsmoth-iv3sp Год назад +1

      Isn't it still basically the same but with pixels ?

    • @ThroughMyEyesASMR
      @ThroughMyEyesASMR Год назад +11

      @@arbjful Can you imagine how long it would take you to graduate college if they taught you all the history of engineering in every manifestation? Even if they did, why wouldn't someone still be impressed by this early tech? I get people misspeaking and saying something stupid, but typing something stupid is quite impressive when you actually have to think and look at what you thought.

  • @JoJoGaminG36
    @JoJoGaminG36 Год назад +8

    This is so simple but yet genius, people back then knew how to explain such stuff in a great quality.

  • @arieflaksono9600
    @arieflaksono9600 Год назад +116

    It's like a dial-up modem, but instead it's just a raw content, no dataframe whatsoever, very ingenious!

    • @Inetman
      @Inetman Год назад +14

      Except that modems (and fax machines) are converting 0s and 1s to analog signal and back (hence the name: MOdulator/DEModulator), and this stuff is purely, 100% analog.

    • @jbalazer
      @jbalazer Год назад +16

      @@Inetman, a modem's modulator is not a digital-to-analog converter. The output of a digital modulator is a digital signal in modulated form. It is not an analog signal. The only thing analog about the old-fashioned dial-up modem is that its digital modulation is designed to be carried over the analog telephone network.
      Analog signaling means some property of the signal (voltage, power, position, etc.) varies continuously in proportion to the value being encoded. A modulated digital signal is not analog. An analog telephone is analog because the electrical signal's voltage (or power) varies in proportion to the sound pressure level of the sound being transmitted.

    • @johnbattista9519
      @johnbattista9519 Год назад +9

      Fax, a very crude version, was invented in the 1840’s I believe.

    • @arieflaksono9600
      @arieflaksono9600 Год назад +5

      just to be clear, nobody gonna expect any digital modulation back in 1930's, the transmitted light intensity would be encoded over audible frequency range, hence it's an analog transmission.
      i'm just referring on how a phone line have been a backbone of information exchange, people nowadays seems to underestimate the historical weight we've put on those line over some internet connection, yes, but I love internet too.

    • @Mi_Fa_Volare
      @Mi_Fa_Volare Год назад +1

      That's what you call (pure) analog.

  • @philipbirch9183
    @philipbirch9183 Год назад +20

    The first images from the moon were sent using a similar process to this. Luna 2, a Soviet probe successfully landed in September 1959. It contained an automatic camera on board which took photos and developed the film itself. The scans were done exactly like this and beamed to Earth. The Russians had 'lost' the probe but the Radio Telescope at Jodrell Bank in England tracked it and received the first pictures. Using a borrowed fax machine they pieced together the images. Until the advent of the first NASA digital cameras all space probe photography was done like this.

  • @sfacets
    @sfacets Год назад +5

    Yesterday my entire family face-timed my 90 year-old grandmother for her birthday. She was born in the 30's and couldn't have fathomed something like this happening in her lifetime.
    It's difficult for me, born in the 80's, to comprehend how something like data transmission couldn't be understood.
    Makes you think

  • @LucasRodmo
    @LucasRodmo Год назад +47

    This is brilliantly explained. Because takes in consideration that the audience will not understand so many new tech in a short time. I wish that workshops, webinars, internet lessons, took this approach more often, because sometimes you just don't have a actual clue about the thing you wanna or have to learn

    • @weedlordbonerhitlerii3862
      @weedlordbonerhitlerii3862 Год назад +2

      the wonderful thing is that it's still relevant because digital imagery still works fundamentally the same way

  • @juhajuntunen7866
    @juhajuntunen7866 Год назад +13

    I build something like this with my brother late 80's, using dotmatrix printer and photodiode as reader and audio digidizer in Amiga to generate image. But pictures were distorded because timing was impossible...

  • @ragnarok7976
    @ragnarok7976 Год назад +6

    Crazy to think that even today most of our communication relies on similar principles of breaking big pieces of information into tiny parts and sending them through wires! Imagine what the people back then would think if they could see what we are watching this on now!

  • @lancepage1914
    @lancepage1914 Год назад +51

    Simple in theory, genius in practice. This is a great example of the step by step processes technology had to go through to as we know it today. Becoming vastly more complicated each time and using the technology and techniques available at the time to simplify what could be. Amazing!

    • @thatguyalex2835
      @thatguyalex2835 Год назад +3

      I didn't know this tech existed in the 1930s until two months ago. Am currently working on a crappy sci-fi plot set on an alien world called The Wastelands in 1909 with '30s levels of tech, and they have this technology. An asteroid was heading to their planet, and the astronomers had to send a photo fax of the asteroid's trajectory for analysis, the first use of that technology on their world. The tech and other tech is used to save the city of 3 million people. Now I am on the part where the asteroid hit the ocean, producing a tsunami wiping out most of the New Spork City area. :) Trying to keep this sci-fi plot as realistic as possible, so I incorporate real technology from the 1930s. The name of this tech in the plot I called "wire photography".

    • @prltqdf9
      @prltqdf9 Год назад

      *_ingenious_* in practice

    • @RuthvenMurgatroyd
      @RuthvenMurgatroyd Год назад

      ​@@thatguyalex2835
      Why '30s level tech if it's in 1909?

  • @MarkWick
    @MarkWick Год назад +65

    This brings back a lot of memories as I was a photojournalist from the early 1970s until about 2010 and I transmitted many photos using a bit more modern equipment, but working the same way, for Associated Press and Reuters. shot on 35mm film, but also developed film and made prints in closets, under stairways, in kitchens, basements, and even in the back of my pickup truck.

    • @_arnavmathur
      @_arnavmathur Год назад

      Sir your like 90 now or what

    • @MarkWick
      @MarkWick Год назад +7

      @@_arnavmathur 72

    • @mrmawster9786
      @mrmawster9786 Год назад

      Wow

    • @gurvindersingh.1814
      @gurvindersingh.1814 Год назад +1

      Sir you did a great 👍 job

    • @tentacle1984
      @tentacle1984 Год назад +2

      That is an amazing career! You must have a collection of memories that may need to be written in book form. Positives and negatives worth reading.

  • @luke7750
    @luke7750 Год назад +5

    What an excellent explanation of how transmitting a photo worked back then

  • @kjamison5951
    @kjamison5951 Год назад +21

    We take a lot of what we have now for granted. It was built in the shoulders of the geniuses who went before.

  • @NackDSP
    @NackDSP Год назад +22

    If that tone played was an example of the signal it seems to be an amplitude modulated tone. That same tone could be used to drive a synchronous AC motor on both the scanner and the printer so the rotation of the drums would track perfectly at both ends.

    • @Philflash
      @Philflash Год назад

      Yes quartz crystal sync motors.

    • @peterduhme2714
      @peterduhme2714 Год назад +1

      I think phones back then were effectively a wire directly connected from the caller to the receiver once the operator patched them together, so maybe there is not even a need to encode the signal into tones. It's just a wire running from one machine to the other.

  • @daniellemullen5035
    @daniellemullen5035 Год назад +5

    I had no idea how long photo scanning was an available technology.
    It goes to show us how the modern, internet-based media infrastructure of today really is adapted from older technologies of earlier decades

  • @crustycurmudgeon2182
    @crustycurmudgeon2182 Год назад +154

    That was a pretty clever system, especially considering the rather primitive state of electronics at the time.

    • @XMarkxyz
      @XMarkxyz Год назад +9

      Look up the Pantelegraph of Caselli, it was able to do pretty much the same thing but a century earlier, quite anazing, the only limitation being that the image or the writing must be traced in a cunductive ink

    • @Therizinosaurus
      @Therizinosaurus Год назад +27

      todays system is a pretty clever system, especially considering the rather primitive state of electronics at this time

    • @halfsourlizard9319
      @halfsourlizard9319 Год назад +2

      @@Therizinosaurus Bringo!

    • @cactusjackNV
      @cactusjackNV Год назад +5

      Was it so "primitive" though?

    • @arbjful
      @arbjful Год назад +10

      I wouldn’t call it primitive….

  • @5roundsrapid263
    @5roundsrapid263 Год назад +15

    Soon after, they started using shortwave radio to send these photos. It was incredibly valuable during WWII. It was used up until at least the 1970’s.

  • @theprof291166
    @theprof291166 Год назад +4

    I still use a drum scanner today, which works in much the same way, except the impulses are converted to a digital signal. I used to run Kodak LVTs, which were the equivelent idea - they had a Red Green and Blue LED that was focused to a very fine spot that then exposed a sheet of film or photo paper. The results were perfectly photographic with resolutions of over 2000 dpi.

  • @sneakypoof
    @sneakypoof Год назад +17

    i absolutely love the analog/mechanical demonstrations.. It's so much easier to understand then just reading or studying a book

  • @axeman3d
    @axeman3d Год назад +18

    Jam Handy must have made thousands of these educational shorts. Pretty much every one I see has their stamp on it. You can also see why Mystery Science Theatre loved them so much as well, so many fun things to point out.

  • @pereiradelima
    @pereiradelima Год назад +5

    Muito interessante saber como as primeiras tecnologias funcionavam, parabéns aos que conseguiram este vídeo original e compartilharam conosco.

  • @italiangarbageposting
    @italiangarbageposting Год назад +42

    Documentaries and instructional videos should all be made like they were in the 1930s, I bet even elementary school kids could stop falling asleep if they were like this

    • @ClickClack_Bam
      @ClickClack_Bam Год назад

      You'd have to remove the white liberals & then anti-white minority POS in the school system first.

  • @scrumtrellecent
    @scrumtrellecent Год назад +82

    It's remarkable to think about how much technological progress we've made since then, and yet I find myself increasingly desensitized to the incredible advances we see today.
    It's easy to forget the wonder and amazement that people must have felt in the days of analogue mid-century technology. Watching this video was a humbling reminder of just how far we've come.

    • @XMysticHerox
      @XMysticHerox Год назад +10

      It's neat how relatively easy this is to understand. Sadly with the modern equivalent you won't understand much without having taken some university level physics courses or an equivalent.

    • @ross-carlson
      @ross-carlson Год назад +2

      @@XMysticHerox And that's sad? Why?

    • @XMysticHerox
      @XMysticHerox Год назад +9

      @@ross-carlson Because it means it is much less accsessible than this older tech. Of course overall it's better but it'd still be nice if more people could grasp the technology they use.

    • @showguyer
      @showguyer Год назад +5

      Im surprised at the technology they had back then! Had to be some smart cookies back then too.

    • @3-DtimeCosmology
      @3-DtimeCosmology Год назад +1

      And this is just the very beginning.
      Today are still the early days.

  • @Lawman212
    @Lawman212 Год назад +8

    I used this technology as late as 1988. I wired a photo from the Raleigh AP bureau to the NYT.

  • @nuassul
    @nuassul Год назад +5

    Una de las cosas que más disfruto de esta clase de videos es la explicación de conceptos que a priori pueden ser bastante confusos o complicados a las personas no dedicadas al tema. La verdad es algo fascinante ver el como se aprovecha la conexión de la red telefónica para enviar imágenes pro medio de artilugios bastante ingeniosos. Por cierto la mayoría de los comentarios de este video son bastante interesantes de leer, saludos y gracias por subir este gran aporte.

  • @MeMyself_andAI
    @MeMyself_andAI Год назад +6

    If you asked me when photo scanning was invented, id have said 1980 or 1990. But 1930?! Incredible. And to think i considered myself a history buff!

  • @cyperus4589
    @cyperus4589 Год назад +60

    This is such a great explanation. Nowadays things seem to be explained in a rather abstract way, but this is a wonderful description of the technology in play

    • @ceoatcrystalsoft4942
      @ceoatcrystalsoft4942 Год назад +5

      That's because you can't explain things abstractly when they are so advanced

    • @kisstune
      @kisstune Год назад

      @@ceoatcrystalsoft4942 More like using our proprietary process we capture the image once we validate the license through our always on DRM and send it through our proprietary process to clean it up and then we use our proprietary process to send it to the other person where our proprietary process reassembles the image but only if they have a valid license that is validated through our always on DRM.

  • @dawright1988
    @dawright1988 Год назад +3

    Very clever! A high school electronics class could easily build one of these nowadays, but to come up with it from nothing is pretty insane. Especially since a lot of the electronic components used were pretty fresh for the time.

  • @VNExperience
    @VNExperience 4 года назад +16

    Great stuff, thanks for posting! I was looking for a video about AP wirephoto and found this original period piece. Cheers mate.

  • @stormblessed2321
    @stormblessed2321 Год назад +8

    Back when the news had some tegrity

  • @whatdoinamethis7963
    @whatdoinamethis7963 Год назад +2

    So that's where the old footage in the stanley parable comes from

  • @TheSongGame
    @TheSongGame Год назад +6

    3:45
    "In fact, there is only one single thing in the world that isn’t a sequel. It's this. We don’t know what it is or why it exists but it’s the prequel from which all sequels are derived."

    • @nexidava
      @nexidava Год назад

      Glad somebody said it 🤭

  • @Gunbudder
    @Gunbudder Год назад +8

    I have an older scanner that works the exact same way, it just has an aperture that is 15 times smaller. This old timey scanner has about 100 dpi and my modern version has about 1500 dpi. You can't find a scanner with less than 300 dpi today, but it was impressive they got it to work at all

  • @in_search_of_awesome
    @in_search_of_awesome Год назад +3

    Can't imagine how complex it was.
    What brains and imaginations they have.
    I this era of WhatsApp messages and social media we don't really understand how amazing these technologies were when introduced.

  • @toomanyhobbies2011
    @toomanyhobbies2011 Год назад +12

    Thank you for the video, an excellent overview of how images were transferred in the 1930s, with photo-sensitive vacuum tubes on each end. We still do that, but our sensors can take in an entire area, then store that into bits, which are then read, sent, and displayed on a light emitting device. Have we really advanced that far?

    • @AA-gl1dr
      @AA-gl1dr Год назад

      I agree. While the modern technology is the entire massive apparatus on a microchip.
      Still using the methods our grandparents built for us, just way way smaller. Can’t wait to see what we build for generations down the line

  • @CottonTailJoe
    @CottonTailJoe Год назад +10

    This is more amazing than anyone now can realize.

  • @markheywood5626
    @markheywood5626 Год назад +1

    Still bloody magic. Amazing what some brilliant minds make.

  • @dwindeyer
    @dwindeyer Год назад +5

    Imagine what it was like having newspapers constantly 3-4 days behind, and then opening one and seeing something from yesterday, wondering how on earth that was possible.

    • @rossbrumby1957
      @rossbrumby1957 Год назад

      Everyday on the nightly news tv, there's semi local, no big deal news that's 3 days old.

    • @whistlingsage9817
      @whistlingsage9817 Год назад

      ...And then realizing that it was just a stupid fluff piece about an airplane stunt that wasn't very impressive, even for the time.

  • @johneygd
    @johneygd Год назад +5

    Just mind blowing how ahead they were with such technology almost 90 years ago , just wow.

  • @gavmansworkshop5624
    @gavmansworkshop5624 Год назад +1

    To think everyone in this video is long gone now. These windows into the past are precious.

  • @lubomirpetrowpahuta
    @lubomirpetrowpahuta Год назад +6

    Łza się w oku kręci uświadamiając sobie że to za życia naszych dziadków a nawet naszych rodziców. Jak będą reagować nasi potomkowie na obecne wynalazki.

  • @nathonso_edits
    @nathonso_edits Год назад +5

    There's just something so much more fascinating about analogue technology, sure the advancements in digital technology have been huge in my lifetime, but it must have been crazy living through that period going from radio to transmitting whole pictures!

  • @daapf8232
    @daapf8232 Год назад +2

    So this is the legendary prequel all sequels were derived from.

  • @baldevis
    @baldevis Год назад +7

    If you watch the Steve McQueen film "Bullitt," you can see that the same technology was still being used in 1968, though it was a bit faster by then. I can still remember seeing that scene back then and thinking "hey, what the hell is that?"

    • @smadaf
      @smadaf Год назад

      I remember that scene!
      They used a lot of wire-photo and analog faxing in the original Hawaii Five-0 television series (1968-1980), too.

  • @Sadness-zov
    @Sadness-zov Год назад +7

    Удивительно, до чего техника дошла!

  • @ahmedkhedr699
    @ahmedkhedr699 Год назад +2

    i love how they explaned a complex thing that even a tik tok addicted can understand

  • @Zekium
    @Zekium Год назад +10

    Before the end, I was wondering how the receiver would print the result and the method used is simply genius !

    • @jonathantan2469
      @jonathantan2469 Год назад +1

      It would project the image on the photo paper like an enlarger... except that it was done line by line on a rotating drum.
      Also, this step was done in the darkroom with a safelight (usually red or yellow light).

    • @sarowie
      @sarowie Год назад +1

      @@jonathantan2469 the amazing part is that to a newspaper, this image transfer tech sounded like technobable, except that the input is a photo on a drum and the output is an undeveloped film on a drum. Developing a film and a phone line is all that is needed? We can do that! It involes some tiny rolling drums? Cute, so it is a simple little machine compared to the printing press.
      That the whole chemistry and process to develop film is an art in it of self, yet was trivial daily to even the smallest news paper. It is brilliant how this technology just "trivially" combines two highly developed and mature technologies in a way intuitive to the traditional process already inuse.

    • @jonathantan2469
      @jonathantan2469 Год назад

      @@sarowie Yes. However, at the recipient end it wasn't film that they placed on the drum, but photo paper. It's the same photo paper, perhaps with minor differences, used to make paper prints of pictures from the negative film.

  • @FabiokiOjedaBuitrago
    @FabiokiOjedaBuitrago Год назад +4

    I work in Tv and digital cinema production field and the rolling rope this is THE BEST explanation I've ever seen on how scaning works. Thank you!

  • @brianrussell4222
    @brianrussell4222 Год назад +1

    For an even better (and entertaining) demonstration, watch the old BBC show The Secret Life of Machines. Each episode is devoted to unraveling the mystery of how things work, such as a fax or a sewing machine.

  • @MCRuCr
    @MCRuCr Год назад +14

    back then they had actual educational content in the media, today we have tik tok

  • @PinPointEye00
    @PinPointEye00 Год назад +5

    Really interesting and surprising to see how relatively simple the technology was when broken down - it was explained and illustrated to us really well also.

  • @edenpalmermusic
    @edenpalmermusic Год назад +1

    I had no idea this technology existed in the 30's, I would place it maybe in the 60's or 70's. Amazing.

    • @sg-yq8pm
      @sg-yq8pm Год назад

      Wake up Eden ffsake, this was old technology in the 30's, the fax was invented in the 1840's, television was already a decade old when this was filmed, the first photo was sent electronically decades earlier, they went to the moon in the 60's and sent back live video.

  • @stuartmiller732
    @stuartmiller732 Год назад +7

    This was fantastic. Very informative!

  • @aussieatheist960
    @aussieatheist960 Год назад +4

    2023 and this is still how our internet works here in Australia!!!

    • @BlondieSL
      @BlondieSL Год назад +2

      But I heard that this summer, your internet will be upgraded to Silicone strings.... true?
      >> giggles and runs like hell 😁

  • @sirtalkalotdoolittle
    @sirtalkalotdoolittle Год назад +1

    I remember at my first newspaper it was a big deal to make sure the AP Photo Wire never ran out of paper. AP faxed the pictures and they would arrive all day long randomly. There was no storage, so if there was no paper when they sent it, too bad for us. Color photos came through in black and white, but in three color separations. Right before I left they were about to get an AP Leaf Desk, which stored the pix electronically. Crazy, I know!
    The funny thing is I'm not as old as you are probably thinking.

  • @mrcydonia
    @mrcydonia Год назад +5

    The solutions they found in the time of analog technology is really mind blowing. I remember seeing a video about an old adding machine that performed calculations using a complex series of gears and levers.

    • @Petefx86
      @Petefx86 Год назад

      You should see inside an old teletype machine. The things had hundreds of moving parts. It really makes you wonder about how anyone figured out how to make such things work.

    • @hey.you.in.the.bushes
      @hey.you.in.the.bushes Год назад

      Look up mechanical logic circuits. Super cool.

  • @tashalino
    @tashalino Год назад +13

    Feels like I’m taking a photography class and I’m learning the history behind photos and picture taking. This was really cool to learn about even though society has kind of dropped it in favor of a new method a few decades ago.

  • @tiktakboom13
    @tiktakboom13 Год назад +2

    Back when people had a job.

  • @AMPProf
    @AMPProf Год назад +4

    Some people still used a Horse and buggy! This Guy sending a fax

    • @aaronbasham6554
      @aaronbasham6554 Год назад +1

      A samurai could have sent a fax to Abraham Lincoln. The technology for fax machines are genuinely surprisingly old

  • @tehpanda64
    @tehpanda64 Год назад +4

    god I love these old engineering explanation videos. Whoever thought to make them deserves more recognition. How do they all have the same guy doing the voice overs too?

    • @WitchKing-Of-Angmar
      @WitchKing-Of-Angmar Год назад

      Because it is the same guy, saying that to you before some idiot comes on here talking to you about the mid-atlantic accent and how everyone sounded the same which is a complete lie.

  • @dv8tyler692
    @dv8tyler692 Год назад +1

    Little did they know this would eventually turn into a system that allowed news to travel the globe before the event had even finished happening. Allowing people to disagree about how actual historical events happened. Amazing!

  • @jiminnorthdallas1227
    @jiminnorthdallas1227 Год назад +5

    "I'm Attempting To Construct A Mnemonic Memory Circuit, Using Stone Knives And Bearskins” - Spock

  • @thefrub
    @thefrub Год назад +7

    This is a really clean restoration, and back in 2013 we didn't have nearly as many video correction programs as we do now

  • @guneethh1201
    @guneethh1201 Год назад +2

    Why do videos from this Era explains stuff more clearer and easier than my teacher screaming lessons into my ears

    • @daveharden5929
      @daveharden5929 Год назад +1

      For sure! Those academic docs of the 1930's/40's explained their subjects very clearly while significantly reducing any further screaming needed as reinforcement. Then again, back then, they didn't need explainers for quantum mechanics, computer science and/or nuclear, aerospace or biochemical engineering just to name a few.....

  • @liamg1995
    @liamg1995 Год назад +2

    Incredible that they were doing this back then! The image quality is surprisingly good given the fairly simple buy ingenious technology.

  • @roblovski300
    @roblovski300 Год назад +8

    This is so simple and yet so genius. Its so interesting to see what people were able to do in the old times with such little instruments

  • @NOELQUEZON
    @NOELQUEZON Год назад +1

    Was so good. Long time without Fax Machine.

  • @goomba008
    @goomba008 Год назад +11

    I didn't even know this amazing technology existed until today. Truly remarkable device!
    Funny enough, i looked this up because I'm watching the first episode of the series Columbo (circa 1970), and the detective mentioned he transmitted a picture through wire photo. I was like tf is wire photo?!

  • @Adam-qd8jh
    @Adam-qd8jh 2 года назад +6

    Wow in a way this sorta reminds of SSTV

    • @Irene.yoshida
      @Irene.yoshida 2 года назад +3

      Yes, SSTV is slow

    • @listerdave1240
      @listerdave1240 Год назад +1

      It is SSTV, they just didn't call it that back then because 'fast can' TVs (that is ordinary TVs) weren't common.

  • @pdtech4524
    @pdtech4524 Год назад +1

    Compare all the technology, all the steps and people involved in the process of sending an image to how we can just send an image with the simple click of a button on our phones.

  • @57thorns
    @57thorns Год назад +4

    The amount of developing the photo before transmission can even take place, wiring physically on to a line, and notice they request a "clear line". This was pretty expensive back then.

    • @57thorns
      @57thorns Год назад +3

      And requirement to use only acoustic coupling set back computer networking in the US for decades. (50 years after this movie was made)