Thread: 98 Years ago...
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Mr. Luddite Mr. Luddite is offline
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Default 98 Years ago...

On 12/7/2015 10:25 AM, Justan Ohlphart wrote:
Keyser Söze Wrote in message:
On 12/6/15 1:00 PM, wrote:
On Sun, 6 Dec 2015 12:23:05 -0500, Keyser Söze wrote:

On 12/6/15 12:15 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 12/6/2015 11:19 AM, Justan Olphart wrote:
On 12/6/2015 9:53 AM, True North wrote:
Recent delivery of Christmas tree to Boston and it's lighting reminds
us of the horrific events on Dec 06 1917. People of Nova Scotia will
always be grateful to the kind citizens of Mass. for their speedy
medical help....arriving by train just days after the disaster. Who
knows how many more would have died if not for the desperately needed
help.
https://www.facebook.com/GlobalNews/...0859946961771/


Having trouble playing this video down here in the US.


Must be due to your Win 10 upgrade. Plays fine on Win 7. :-)


Plays fine down here in the USA on my iMac and Samsung Android Tablet.

Even works on my prehistoric XP anachronism.


Shows up on that teletype screen, eh?


Teletype screen?
Back in the day we used a teletypewriter for output with a paper
tape reader for input.
Hobbyists used Comodore 64,Radio Shack, and other toys to access
bulletin board systems and do rudimental computing. Greg seems to
have a pretty good recollection of all that stuff. He would be a
good resource if you wanted to find out about early day
computing.


Before I converted to "ET" in the Navy I was an "RM" for two years and
was sent to Teletype Repair "C" school in Norfolk to learn how to
completely disassemble, repair, reassemble, adjust and maintain Mod 28
Teletype machines. There were two versions on ships and shore stations
at that time. One was just the printer section for receiving messages.
The other was the full console with the keyboard and tape reader for
sending messages. Don't remember much about them other than they had a
bunch of mechanical clutches operated by a main shaft that had to be
precisely adjusted. The Mod 28 was originally designed to run at 60
words per minute (a "word" being five characters) but they had been
upgraded to run at a blistering 100 words per minute. They were 8 bit
machines including a "start bit" and a "stop bit".

Upon graduation from the school the students traditionally received a
card proclaiming that you were now a "Doctor of Teletype Technology".
I still have mine.

Archaic technology now-a-days but it was a digital format and a
predecessor to computers. So was Morse Code, for that matter.