Dictionary Definition
teletypewriter n : a character printer connected
to a telegraph that operates like a typewriter [syn: teleprinter, teletype
machine, telex,
telex
machine]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- An electromechanical communications device consisting of a typewriter keyboard and printer together with a punched paper tape reader/writer and connection to a modem so that information may be sent and received over a telephone system.
Derived terms
See also
Extensive Definition
A teleprinter (teletypewriter, Teletype or TTY
for TeleTYpe/TeleTYpewriter) is a now largely obsolete
electro-mechanical typewriter which can be used
to communicate typed messages from point to point through a simple
electrical communications channel, often just a pair of
wires.
The most modern form of these devices are fully
electronic and use a screen instead of a printer. These
teletypewriters are still in use by the deaf for typed
communications over the telephone, usually called a TDD (Telecommunications
Devices for the Deaf) or TTY (although TTY, as indicated in the
previous paragraph, refers to teleprinters in general).
History
The teleprinter evolved through a series of inventions by a number of engineers, including Royal Earl House, David E. Hughes, Edward Kleinschmidt, Charles Krum, Emile Baudot and Frederick G. Creed. A predecessor to the teleprinter, the stock ticker machine, was used as early as the 1870s as a method of displaying text transmitted over wires. A specially-designed telegraph typewriter was used to send stock exchange information over telegraph wires to the ticker machines.Teleprinter operation
Most teleprinters used the 5-bit Baudot code (also known as ITA2). This limited the character set to 32 codes. One had to use a "FIGS" shift key to type numbers and special characters. Special versions had FIGS codes for specific applications like weather reports. Print quality was poor by modern standards. The Baudot code was used asynchronously with start and stop bits: the asynchronous code design was intimately linked with the start-stop electro-mechanical design of teleprinters. (Early systems had used synchronous codes, but were hard to synchronise mechanically). Other codes, such as Fieldata and Flexowriter, were introduced but never became as popular as Baudot.Mark and space are terms describing logic levels
in Teletype circuits. The native mode of communication for a
Teletype is a simple series DC circuit
that is interrupted, much as a rotary dial
interrupts a telephone signal. The marking condition is when the
circuit is closed, the spacing condition is when the circuit is
open. The start of a character is signalled by a space. The stop
bits are marking, so as to be distinct from the subsequent start
bit. When the line is broken, a Teletype cycles continuously but
prints nothing because it is receiving all zeros, the ASCII (or Baudot) null
character. Each Teletype circuit was leased from AT&T and
consisted of twisted pair
copper
wires through ordinary telephone cables. These Teletype
circuits were wired in series but were not connected to telephone
switches.
The Teletype circuit was often linked to a
paper
tape punch (or "reperforator") and reader, allowing messages
received to be resent on another circuit. Complex military and
commercial communications networks were built using this
technology. Message centers had rows of teleprinters and large
racks for paper tapes awaiting transmission. Skilled operators
could read the priority from the hole pattern and might even feed a
"FLASH PRIORITY" tape into a reader while it was still coming out
of the punch. Routine traffic often had to wait hours for relay.
Many teleprinters had built-in paper tape readers and punches,
allowing messages to be created and edited off-line.
More than two teleprinters could be connected to
the same wire circuit by means of a current
loop. Communication by radio, RTTY, was also common.
Amateur
radio operators still use this mode of communication.
Teletype machines
Teletype was a trademark of the Teletype Corporation of Skokie, Illinois, USA. The predecessor Morkrum Company was founded in 1906 by Charles Krum and Mr. Joy Morton (of Morton Salt). They made their first commercial installation of a printing telegraph with the Postal Telegraph Company in Boston and New York in 1910. It became popular with railroads, and the Associated Press adopted it in 1914 for their wire service. Morkrum merged with their competitor E.E. Kleinschmidt to become Morkrum-Kleinschmidt Corporation shortly before being renamed the Teletype Corporation. The company became part of AT&T in 1930. The last vestiges of what had been Teletype Corporation ceased in 1990. http://www.kekatos.com/teletype/The two parts kept their own peculiar design
styles. "Teletype" machines tended to be large, heavy, and
extremely robust-- capable of running non-stop for months at a
time. In particular the Model 15 and Model 28 lines had very strong
cast-iron frames, heavy-duty mechanisms, and heavy sound-proofed
cases. The "Kleinschmidt" line tended to be somewhat more
typewriter-like-- lighter, quieter-- more aluminum and less
iron.
Teletype machines were given a model number,
often modified by letters indicating the configuration:
- RO - Receive only
- KSR - Keyboard send and receive
- ASR - Automatic send and receive (i.e. built-in paper tape reader and punch)
Teletype Corporation documents invariably
prefixed the configuration to the model number, e.g. "M33ASR"
(Model 33 Automatic Send and Receive). In contrast, some customers
and users tended to place the configuration before the model
number, e.g. "ASR-33".
Major models and their dates:
- 12 - 1922 - the first general purpose teletype
- 14 - 1925 - about 60,000 were built
- 15 - 1930 - the mainstay of U.S. military communications in WWII. About 200,000 were built
- 20 - 1950s - upper/lower case printer machine with four rows of keys, using a six-bit code for TeleTypeSetter (TTS) use
- 28 - 1950s - regarded as the most rugged machine Teletype ever built; used a type block for printing
- 29 - 1950s - eight-bit machine using an IBM BCD code
- 32/33 - 1961 - a low-cost, all-mechanical design; used a type wheel for printing. The 32 was Baudot, the 33 ASCII, but still upper case only. The 33 ASR was ubiquitous as a console device in the early minicomputer era
- 35 - 1961 - an ASCII version of the model 28
- 37 - 1973 - upper/lower case, 150 baud version of the model 35
- 38 - 1973 - upper/lower case, wide carriage version of the model 33
- Dataspeed 40 - late 1970s, used for Switching Control Center System and similar purposes
- 42/43 - 1979 - an electronic, dot-matrix printer design, 42 being Baudot and 43 ASCII
Earlier Teletype machines had 3 rows of keys and
only supported upper case letters. They used the 5 bit baudot code
and generally worked at 60 words per minute. Teletypes with ASCII
code were an innovation that came into widespread use in the same
period as computers began to become widely available.
Speed, intended to be roughly comparable to
words per
minute, was the standard designation introduced by Western
Union for a mechanical teleprinter data transmission rate using
the 5-bit baudot code
that was popular in the 1940s and for several decades thereafter.
Such a machine would send 1 start bit, 5 data bits, and 1.42 stop
bits. This unusual stop bit time was actually a rest period to
allow the mechanical printing mechanism to recycle. Since modern
computer equipment cannot easily generate 1.42 bits for the stop
period, common practice is to either approximate this with 1.5
bits, or to send 2.0 bits while accepting 1.0 bits receiving.
For example, a 60 speed machine is geared at 45.5
baud (22.0 ms per bit), a 66 speed
machine is geared at 50.0 baud (20.0 ms per bit), a 75 speed
machine is geared at 56.9 baud (17.5 ms per bit), a 100 speed
machine is geared at 74.2 baud (13.5 ms per bit), and a 133 speed
machine is geared at 100.0 baud (10.0 ms per bit). 60 speed became
the de
facto standard for amateur
radio RTTY
operation because of the widespread availability of equipment at
that speed and the FCC restrictions to
only 60 speed from 1953 to 1972. Telex, news agency
wires and similar services commonly used 66 speed services. There
was some migration to 75 and 100 speed as more reliable devices
were introduced. However, the limitations of HF transmission such
as excessive error rates due to multipath distortion and the nature
of ionospheric propagation kept many users at 60 and 66 speed. Most
Teletype sound
effects in existence today are at 60 speed, and mostly of the
Model 15.
Another measure of the speed of a Teletype
machine was in total operations per minute (OPM). For example, 60
speed was usually 368 OPM, 66 speed was 404 OPM, 75 speed was 460
OPM, and 100 speed was 600 OPM. Western Union Telexes were usually
set at 390 OPM, with 7.0 total bits instead of the customary 7.42
bits.
A major difference should be noted between the
majority of "teletypes" and the Model 26, 32, 33 and 38 series. All
the older teletypes were built for heavy-duty 24-hour continuous
use with only occasional oiling and cleaning, and an eventual
lifetime of tens of thousands of hours until completely worn out.
By contrast, the Model 26, 32, 33, and 38s were designed for
light-duty use, just a few hours a day, and wearing out beyond
economical refurbishment in just a few thousand hours. The older
models were built with long-lasting parts: steel levers,
ball-bearings, cast-iron frames. The 26, 32, 33, and 38 were mostly
mazak
("monkey-metal") castings, thin levers, plastic gears, and plastic
cases.
The Model 15 stands out as one of a few machines
that remained in production for many many decades. It was
introduced in 1935 and remained in production until 1963, a total
of 28 years of continuous production. Very few complex machines can
match that record. To be fair, the production run was stretched
somewhat by World War II-- the Model 28 was scheduled to replace
the Model 15 in the mid-1940s, but Teletype built so many factories
to produce the Model 15 during World War II, it was more economical
to continue mass production of Model 15s for another couple of
decades.
There were about 100,000 33-ASR Teletypes made in
total. Now any personal
computer equipped with a serial port
can emulate the functionality of a Teletype. About the only feature
that was required by Teletypes that has been generally abandoned is
that a real Teletype required two stop bits to work reliably, so
that each ASCII character (7
bits plus one parity bit)
took 11 bit times. This is why 100 word per minute Teletypes
transmitted at 110 baud. Today, most asynchronous serial data
connections use one stop bit.
Both wire-service and private teletypes had bells
to signal important incoming messages and could ring 24/7 while the
power was turned on. For example, ringing 4 bells on UPI
wire-service machines meant an "Urgent" message; 5 bells was a
"Bulletin"; and 11 bells was a FLASH, used only for very important
news.
Telex
A global teleprinter network, called the Telex
network, was established in the 1920s, and was used through
most of the 20th century for business communications. The main
difference from a standard teleprinter is that Telex includes a
switched routing network, originally based on pulse-telephone dialing, which in
the United States was provided by Western Union. AT&T developed
a competing network called TWX which
initially also used rotary dialing and Baudot code, carried to the
customer premises as pulses of DC on a metallic copper pair.
TWX
later added a second ASCII-based service using Bell 103
type modems served over lines whose physical interface was
identical to regular telephone lines. In many cases, the TWX
service was provided by the same telephone central office that
handled voice calls, using class of service to prevent POTS
customers from connecting to TWX customers. Telex is still in use
in some countries for certain applications such as shipping, news,
weather reporting and military command. Many business applications
have moved to the Internet as most
countries have discontinued telex/TWX services. see telegraphy
TeleTypeSetter
In addition to the 5-bit Baudot code and the much later eight-bit ASCII code, there was a six-bit code known as the TTS code (TeleTypeSetter) used by news wire services. A Model 20 Teletype machine with a punch ("reperforator") was installed at subscriber newspaper sites. Originally these machines would simply punch paper tapes and these tapes could be fed directly to a suitably equipped Linotype machine. In later years the incoming 6-bit current loop signal was coupled directly into a minicomputer or mainframe for editing and eventual feed to a phototypesetting machine.Teleprinters in computing
Some of the earliest computers (for example, the LGP-30) used teleprinters for input and output. Teleprinters were also used as the first interactive computer terminals. They had no video display. Users typed commands after a prompt character appeared. This was the origin of the text terminal and the command line interface. The paper tape function was sometimes used to prepare input for the computer session offline, or to capture computer output. The popular ASR33 teletype used 7-bit ASCII code (with an eighth parity bit) instead of Baudot. The common modem communications settings, Start/Stop Bits and Parity, stem from the teletype era.In computing, especially under
Unix and
Unix-like operating
systems, teletypewriter has become the name for any text
terminal, like an external console
device, a user dialing in to the system on a modem on a serial port
device, a printing or graphical computer
terminal on a computer's serial port or the RS-232 port on a
USB-to-RS-232
converter attached to a computer's USB port, or even a terminal
emulator application in the window system using a pseudo
terminal device. Such devices have the prefix
tty, such as /dev/tty13, or pty (for pseudo-tty), such as
/dev/ptya0.
Obsolescence of Teleprinters
Although printing news, messages, and other text at a distance is still universal, the dedicated teleprinter tied to a pair of leased copper wires was made functionally obsolete by the Fax, personal computer, inkjet printer, broadband, and the Internet.Teleprinters in popular culture
- The HTML element is referred to as "Teletype" and renders text in the browser's default monospaced font (usually Lucida Console or Courier).
- The local and remote console client in UNIX system has the name of TTY console terminals.
- The characteristic rhythmic "chunking" sound of a teleprinter in operation has long been audio shorthand for news, and countless television news themes have been based on musical emulations of the staccato teleprinter sound.
- A teleprinter-related malfunction is a crucial plot point in Michael Crichton's The Andromeda Strain.
- A misprint caused by a bug falling into a teleprinter sets into motion the plot of Terry Gilliam's Brazil.
- The before-its-time voice-recognition dictation machine the dying Ben Rand uses in 1979's Being There is a Teletype Model 40 VDT. (The sound of its printer performing a form feed--a comic effect in the film--is authentic.)
- Teleprinters are visible on the sets of Murphy Brown, Mary Tyler Moore and WKRP in Cincinnati, among others.
- Howard 100 News currently (2006-2007) uses the sound of teleprinters in the background during their news broadcasts.
- A Telex machine is mentioned in the lyrics to The Boomtown Rats song "I Don't Like Mondays" (1979).
- In The Spy Who Loved Me (film), Teletypes and teleprinters are used in communications between a surface ship and submarines.
- New York City radio station WINS uses the Teleprinter sound effect which plays in the background during news updates.
- A teleprinter plays a major plot device in the end of the 1976 film All the President's Men.
See also
- RTTY radio teletype
- Creed & Company
- Letter-quality printer
External links
- A first-hand report of Teletype Corporation's early years by Howard L. Krum himself.
- History of Teletypewriter Development by R.A. Nelson.
- North American Digital Comunications Museum, featuring several teletype machines.
- TTY Phones for the Deaf and Speech Impaired
- Superb website which has a large photo library and various interfaces to connect teleprinters to a serial port or for the Telexphone Network!
- Baudot.net: Teletype Machines - 100 years of Paper Tape and Teleprinters
- "Some Notes on Teletype Corporation", an excellent collection of information from the "GreenKeys" mailing list
- "GreenKeys is an email list devoted to the discussion of older radio teletype (RTTY) gear including mechanical teleprinters (Teletype, Kleinschmidt, etc.), terminal units, paper tape, gears, cams, oil, and anything else related to TTY/RTTY."
- A Few Words About the Telex (history of the telex as used by one company)
Patents
- "Telegraph printer" (Type 12 Teletype), filed June 1924, issued April 1928
- "Telegraph receiver" (Type 14 Teletype), filed December 1924, issued February 1930
- "Signalling system and apparatus therefor" (Type 15 Teletype) - filed July 1930, issued April 1933
- "Frequency-Shift Teletypewriter" - filed August 1966, issued April 1970
teletypewriter in Bosnian: Teleprinter
teletypewriter in Czech: Dálnopis
teletypewriter in German: Fernschreiber
teletypewriter in Spanish: Teletipo
teletypewriter in French: Téléscripteur
teletypewriter in Italian: Telescrivente
teletypewriter in Hebrew: טלפרינטר
teletypewriter in Dutch: Teleprinter
teletypewriter in Japanese: テレタイプ端末
teletypewriter in Norwegian:
Fjernskrivning
teletypewriter in Polish: Dalekopis
teletypewriter in Portuguese: Teletipo
teletypewriter in Simple English:
Teletypewriter
teletypewriter in Slovak: Ďalekopis
teletypewriter in Finnish:
Kaukokirjoitin