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Message Digest 
Volume 28 : Issue 47 : "text" Format

Messages in this Issue:
  Re: TTY 33 and 35 case and cover composition? 
  Re: TTY 33 and 35 case and cover composition? 
  Re: TTY 33 and 35 case and cover composition? 
  Re: Teen sends 14,528 text messages in one month 
  Re: Teen sends 14,528 text messages in one month 
  Re: Teen sends 14,528 text messages in one month 
  Re: TTY 33 and 35 case and cover composition? 
  Re: TTY 33 and 35 case and cover composition? 

====== 27 years of TELECOM Digest -- Founded August 21, 1981 ======
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Date: Sun, 15 Feb 2009 08:25:31 -0600
From: "Kenneth P. Stox" <stox@sbcglobal.net>
To: redacted@invalid.telecom.csail.mit.edu
Subject: Re: TTY 33 and 35 case and cover composition? 
Message-ID: <wBVll.16322$YU2.5394@nlpi066.nbdc.sbc.com>

Bill Horne wrote:
> Jim Haynes wrote:
> 
> 
>> Around Teletype Corp. there was a famous story of a truck parts supplier
>> whose computer system did not incorporate any reasonableness checking
>> on quantities.  (As many systems today still lack.)  A single bit
>> error turned an order for 7 dipsticks into one for 1007 dipsticks.
> 
> Sorry, that doesn't (excuse the pun) compute. A single bit error would 
> alter the total by a power of two: I'd believe that 7 turned into 1031, 
> but not 1007. Sounds like a company legend.

Actually, shouldn't it be 1039? Even that is unlikely unless the bit 
flip was internal to the computer. If it was flipped coming from a 
terminal, one would expect that a single character would be corrupted.

***** Moderator's Note *****

I assumed that the a single bit error would be the result of digital
data being transferred over a channel that had no error checking, so
the closest power-of-two would be 1024, and 1024+7=1031.

If the story was about a text error, it would only make sense if the
field was transmitted with zero fill, i.e., as "0007", and if the bit
flip turned the first zero into a one. 

As I said, these "salesman's stories" morph to fit the company that's
using them, so they're best understood after having a couple of
drinks.

Bill Horne
Temporary Moderator

------------------------------

Date: 15 Feb 2009 14:32:42 -0000
From: John Levine <johnl@iecc.com>
To: redacted@invalid.telecom.csail.mit.edu
Cc: redacted@invalid.telecom-digest.org
Subject: Re: TTY 33 and 35 case and cover composition? 
Message-ID: <20090215143242.28202.qmail@simone.iecc.com>

>> Around Teletype Corp. there was a famous story of a truck parts supplier
>> whose computer system did not incorporate any reasonableness checking
>> on quantities.  (As many systems today still lack.)  A single bit
>> error turned an order for 7 dipsticks into one for 1007 dipsticks.
>
>Sorry, that doesn't (excuse the pun) compute. A single bit error would 
>alter the total by a power of two: I'd believe that 7 turned into 1031, 
>but not 1007. Sounds like a company legend.

How soon they forget the IBM 705, 7080, et al.  A one bit error could
most definitely turn 0007 into 1007.

R's,
John

>> Form feed and tabulation very early showed up as customer requirements,
>> so the Model 15 (circa 1930) had those features.
>
>I didn't know that Baudot/Murray code had a form-feed character. How was 
>it done?

Probaby replaced the pound symbol or something else little used in the US.

***** Moderator's Note *****

I never worked with IBM 705 or 7080 equipment. What made it possible
for a one-bit error to have that effect?

Bill Horne
Temporary Moderator

------------------------------

Date: 15 Feb 2009 22:48:34 -0000
From: John Levine <johnl@iecc.com>
To: redacted@invalid.telecom.csail.mit.edu
Cc: redacted@invalid.telecom-digest.org
Subject: Re: TTY 33 and 35 case and cover composition? 
Message-ID: <20090215224834.60289.qmail@simone.iecc.com>

>>Sorry, that doesn't (excuse the pun) compute. A single bit error would 
>>alter the total by a power of two: I'd believe that 7 turned into 1031, 
>>but not 1007. Sounds like a company legend.
>
>How soon they forget the IBM 705, 7080, et al.  A one bit error could
>most definitely turn 0007 into 1007.

>I never worked with IBM 705 or 7080 equipment. What made it possible
>for a one-bit error to have that effect?

Decimal arithmetic, of course.

R's,
John


------------------------------

Date: 15 Feb 2009 14:36:53 -0000
From: John Levine <johnl@iecc.com>
To: redacted@invalid.telecom.csail.mit.edu
Cc: redacted@invalid.telecom-digest.org
Subject: Re: Teen sends 14,528 text messages in one month 
Message-ID: <20090215143653.29348.qmail@simone.iecc.com>

In article <gn84dp$gn3$1@gal.iecc.com> you write:
>I know that with our basic Verizon plan, with text msgs at $0.20 US each,
>it's not going to happen!

Better upgrade to the Select plan with unlimited texts, then get that
thumb in shape.

R's,
John


------------------------------

Date: Sun, 15 Feb 2009 12:15:46 -0500
From: "MC" <for.address.look@www.ai.uga.edu.slash.mc>
To: redacted@invalid.telecom.csail.mit.edu
Subject: Re: Teen sends 14,528 text messages in one month 
Message-ID: <23Yll.4338$qa.2405@bignews4.bellsouth.net>

"Joseph Singer" <joeofseattle@yahoo.com> wrote in message news:299777.77318.qm@web52702.mail.re2.yahoo.com...

> 
> Many factors determine how much people use text messaging.  Among
> the factors are the age groups involved, how much voice calling
> costs as well as what's "right" for the situation.  Many times the
> sending of a text message to someone who's tied up with something is
> a better fit for that person than actually making them stop what
> they are doing to have a telephone conversation with you at the
> moment.


True, but 14,528 messages per month is an average of one every 3
minutes day and night!  Or one every 2 waking minutes if the person is
asleep 1/3 of the time.  Someone needs to get a life!


------------------------------

Date: Sun, 15 Feb 2009 17:52:51 -0800 (PST)
From: hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com
To: redacted@invalid.telecom.csail.mit.edu
Subject: Re: Teen sends 14,528 text messages in one month 
Message-ID: <74497b2f-3a5e-4187-b8f1-bea58da8758f@v13g2000yqm.googlegroups.com>

On Feb 15, 8:38 pm, "MC" <for.address.l...@www.ai.uga.edu.slash.mc>
wrote:

> True, but 14,528 messages per month is an average of one every 3
> minutes day and night!  Or one every 2 waking minutes if the person is
> asleep 1/3 of the time.  Someone needs to get a life!

Or the original story is exaggered, which is what I suspect.


------------------------------

Date: Sun, 15 Feb 2009 09:57:24 -0800 (PST)
From: hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com
To: redacted@invalid.telecom.csail.mit.edu
Subject: Re: TTY 33 and 35 case and cover composition? 
Message-ID: <e9fa653f-1829-44c0-9a49-48d3f41bc674@h5g2000yqh.googlegroups.com>

On Feb 14, 11:17 pm, Jim Haynes <hay...@giganews.com> wrote:
> Telex, using 50 baud and Baudot code was long-established in Europe
> at the time.  One of W.U.'s goals was to tie into the European system,
> something that TWX did not attempt.  W.U. was somewhat hobbled since
> the government had required that company to divest the international
> cable business.  Thus to connect with Europe W.U. had to turn to RCA
> or WU International or other companies for connectivity.

IMHO, based on Oslin's book, WU was treated unfairly when they (1) had
to acquire the money-losing Postal Telegraph and (2) divest the
international cable business.  WU, even in the 1940s, was not a big
and powerful company with unlimited resources, yet the govt acted as
if it was.



> W.U. either wanted TWX or wanted TWX to go away.  It was forever an
> article of faith with W.U. people that AT&T had violated an agreement
> to stay out of the telegraph business when it introduced TWX.  And
> W.U. argued that TWX was cream-skimming business away from their public
> telegram business.  AT&T countered that what they had agreed to was to
> stay out of the public telegram business, and that TWX was in fact a
> different service altogether since it provided a real-time two-way
> conversation.  W.U. used all kinds of lame arguments to try to get the
> government to declare there should be one national voice communication
> system and a separate record communication system, as if the wires cared
> what kind of signals they carried.

Again, IMHO, WU was right and AT&T was wrong in this aspect.  AT&T was
a rapidly growing company, WU was not.  I can't help but suspect if WU
attempted significant private line voice communications on its own
network (which it had every right to do and did to a very limited
extent) AT&T would scream in protest.  Unfortunately, WU wasn't
interested in voice and much of its network couldn't handle it anyway.

AT&T did throw WU a few bones by billing telegrams directly to phone
accounts and later giving deep discounts on leased lines, at least
until MCI made a stink about unfair treatment.

I suspect AT&T was willing to tolerate a small WU to avoid anti-trust
issues (not that it helped), the way IBM tolerated Remington Rand and
predecessors in the punched card business, even helping them out on
occassion, again to avoid anti-trust issues (not that it helped).


> Form feed and tabulation very early showed up as customer requirements,
> so the Model 15 (circa 1930) had those features.

Thanks for the correction.


> You'd think so, yet one thing that stood in the way of getting ASCII
> approved was that IBM wanted a code that was easier to translate to
> card code.  That's why we got EBCDIC.

Well, for the first 35 years or so, that card code dependency was very
important in programming, so it made sense to do so.  To this day
sometimes in rough mainframe programming the "overpunch" of the sign
in a numeric character causes a letter to be displayed instead of the
last digit.


> I agree, that would be very interesting, and I wish somebody would do it.
> All you learn from the business press is that W.U. had more debts than
> they had income.  I wonder if they were shocked by having to replace the
> AUTODIN computer with new models rather quickly, because of the rapid
> evolution of computer technology.

I am speculating here, but I suspect WU's engineers and management may
have been more conservative and not ready for the rapid changes in
electronics that occurred in the 1960s.  As such, I suspect they were
shocked at the need to replace AUTODIN and not prepared to deal with
it.

But in fairness to WU, many 'tech" companies found it hard to keep up
and [not] make mistakes.  Take IBM and the coming of computers.  There's a
myth that IBM's Thomas J. Watson Sr was against computers, but that's
not true.  He sponsored electronics research even before his son
joined the company and then turned it over to his son, Tom Jr.  The
problem at IBM was that even the son didn't see computers coming, and
most of IBM's engineers were mechanical oriented, not electronics
oriented.  The son had to spin the company around in the 1950s several
times, one to focus on electronics, and again to switch from tubes to
transistors.

Also, IBM developed advanced transistor manufacturing techniques which
were very valuable, but didn't think to patent them, and other
companies got the benefit.

I do want to point [out] that, unlike today, electronics were extremely
expensive in the 1950s and 1960s, and just because electronics were
fast did not mean a relay was replaced with a circuit card.  I can
well understand WU's reluctance to spend big $$ to replace their
relatively new relay systems with electronics.  However, given the
benefit of 20/20 hindsight, I suggest they made a mistake in that an
electronic faster network would've been more attractive to data
communications.

As mentioned, what I don't understand is the apparent disconnect
between what WU said in print and what they actually did.  Their tech
journal talked about computers and high speed sophisticated stuff, but
my impression is the implementation of such stuff was relatively
rare.  I get the impression it took them a very long time to set up
microwave channels.

As an aside, all companies that have been around for a long time will
have to drastically re-invent themselves as times change.  Some
companies manage to do so and thrive, others can't and whither away.


------------------------------

Date: Sun, 15 Feb 2009 17:51:17 -0800 (PST)
From: hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com
To: redacted@invalid.telecom.csail.mit.edu
Subject: Re: TTY 33 and 35 case and cover composition? 
Message-ID: <2f58c7c7-574b-4d96-8215-c5f0db06c423@m42g2000yqb.googlegroups.com>

On Feb 14, 11:22 pm, Bill Horne <b...@horneQRM.net> wrote:

> You're entitled to your opinion, but I don't think they were looking
> that far ahead: integrated circuits weren't invented yet in 1963, and
> Teletype probably assumed that electromechanical terminals would remain
> viable indefinitely.

I'll have to go to the university library to look up old periodicals
(Business Week and Datamation)  to see what was said, if anything,
when the TTY 33 was announced.   Unfortunately, much of that stuff is
not indexed.  I tried searching the NYT but couldn't find any
reference.  (I did find that in both 1949 and 1964 WU wanted to buy
TWX but was rebuffed.)

As to integrated circuits, I don't think their existence is relevant,
particularly in peripherals.  IBM used its older and cheaper 1950s
plain transistor cards in its System/360 peripherals, using its modern
hybrids only for the high speed CPU.



> Yes, UPI and AP used Model 15's until they were made obsolete, first by
> dot-matrix printers and then by "online" CRT-based computers which
> allowed news editors to paste copy directly onto TelePrompTer or
> Compu=Prompt inputs, and to feed the news directly into "Pagination"
> newspaper preparation systems.

My feeling is that if message transmission was the sole goal, the
models 15 and 28, both excellent machines still in production,
would've served very well.  Dials could and were attached to them for
TWX/Telex service.  What advantage to the message-sending customer was
there to go ASCII?  In those days ASCII's extra bits meant extra
hardware and line capacity to transmit.  And as you said, ASCII took
longer.


> I'm not familiar with WU's history, so I'll ask other readers to chime
> in on that question. I know that WU did offer dedicated data circuits in
> the 70's and into the 80's, but the advent of FedEx and email killed its
> telegram business, and high-speed fax machines were the death knell of
> the TELEX network.

The general public telegram business was killed off by cheap long
distance voice rates, and WU knew in 1960 there was no future in it.
By 1978 the telegram was virtually dead, and that was before FedEx and
email.  WU public operators dealt with sending money, which remains
the new company's business today.

After WW II AT&T regularly lowered its long distance rates but at the
same time Western Union was raising its telegram rates.  Before circa
1958 people sent telegrams because it was cheaper--almost half the
price in some cases-- even easier than long distance.   We take for
granted easy long distance, but in 1958 for many subscribers it was
not so easy and expensive for everyone.  AT&T pushed long distance as
a useful business tool, but WU did not push the basic telegram.
Delivering telegrams was very expensive.

The real WU question is what happened to those data circuits of the
1970s you mention.  Why didn't WU expand that business, particularly
in the 1960s and 1970s?  (By the 1980s it was too late.)



> Since many PC's now come equipped with all the common functionality on
> one motherboard, many users are unconcerned with expansion slots. I
> think they were always valued more for theoretical expansion than
> practical need, but I digress.

Back in the early 1960s hardware was so expensive that modularity and
add-ons were critical to hold cost down.  Computers were sold with
memory in tiny increments.  I can't imagine having a Teletype without
a keyboard or tape reader/punch, but they were options.  Heck, in the
old days lights on 6 button telephone keysets were an extra cost
option, and wink-hold were a still further additional cost.

Customers often wanted to enter technology on the low side, and wanted
the ability to expand if and when the need arose.  They did not want
to redo their entire operation upon expansion.



> IBM chose not to go ASCII: those in the mainframe world still wrestle
> with EBCDIC, yet IBM is a mostly-profitable business to this day.
> Western Union's choice not to embrace ASCII had, IMNSHO, nothing to do
> with its demise: the company failed to adapt to the marketplace's demand
> for more sophisticated tools, and WU could have provided them without
> abandoning Baudot in legacy uses such as TELEX. Keep in mind that TWX
> machines, which (at least for the "100 speed" side) were already
> equipped for ASCII, never played any significant role in computer data
> processing. Baudot is just a way of getting something done, and WU chose
> not to do it, i.e., the company refused to face the threat to its
> TELEX/TWX networks in time to reform itself for the new age.

Interesting comment, how TWX didn't get involved with computers.



> > Again, I'm not an expert, but it would seem that WU's proportionate
> > role in business communciations in 1960 was far smaller in 1970.

> Well, in the end we're saying the same thing with different analogies:
> Western Union could have, but chose not to, adapt to the revolution in
> business practice brought about by the invention of cheap general
> purpose computers. It's easy to see, in retrospect, that the PC was only
> a gateway - but it was the mother of all apertures, through which poured
> an incredible, pent-up demand for connectivity, for entertainment, and
> for the capability to reach others who share an individual's interests.

My feeling is that when the PC came out as a serious business tool,
circa 1980, it was too late for WU.  WU's fate was due to decisions
made in the 1960s, which is why I focus on ASCII and the 33/35.

As an aside, I see the PC "mother of aperture" differently when it
comes to communications.  Early PCs were $1,000, and a modem wasn't
include and was extra.  In the early days, aside from hobbyists and
some business users, most people used PCs for spreadsheets, word
processing, and databases (and games for home users).  If all someone
wanted to do was communications, a good terminal could've been sold
for say $300 instead of the $1,000 for a full featured PC.

The PC did help the communication revolution you speak, but only
_indirectly_.  People _already had_ PCs, so adding a modem and a web
browser was no big deal.

In my opinion, the real driver of the communication revolution was the
huge decline in the price of central data servers (computers) and
communication lines.  Cheap servers made it possible for people to
afford to offer useful information on-line, and, to do so in a very
user-friendly format.  Cheap communications made it possible to
provide full scale interconnections between servers and the users, and
again, to do it in a user-friendly format.

In other words, even if the PC was available for say only $100, there
wouldn't be much to connect to if servers and communication lines were
as expensive as they were in 1980.  The parts of a computer--CPU,
internal memory, and disk memory--all declined steeply in price, so
the storage and access cost (in terms of cents per character) got
cheaper.

The ability for someone at home to communicate to computers or other
people was forseen and published in the early 1960s; they just had to
wait for the price of technology to come down to make it worthwhile
for the masses (and the software to be a little easier for lay
people.)  We could just as easily be having this conversation using
Teletypes as a terminal to the central computer.


------------------------------




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