Telephone History - Telephone Technology
Service Lines and Switchboards
In 1877, construction of the first regular telephone line from Boston to Somerville, Massachusetts was completed. By the end of 1880, there were 47,900 telephones in the United States. The following year telephone service between Boston and Providence had been established. Service between New York and Chicago started in 1892, and between New York and Boston in 1894. Transcontinental service by overhead wire was not inaugurated until 1915. The first switchboard was set up in Boston in 1877. On January 17, 1882, Leroy Firman received the first patent for a telephone switchboard.
Exchanges and Rotary Dialing
The first regular telephone exchange was established in New Haven in 1878. Early telephones were leased in pairs to subscribers. The subscriber was required to put up his own line to connect with another. In 1889, Almon B. Strowger a Kansas City undertaker, invented a switch that could connect one line to any of 100 lines by using relays and sliders. This switch became known as "The Strowger Switch" and was still in use in some telephone offices well over 100 years later. Almon Strowger was issued a patent on March 11, 1891 for the first automatic telephone exchange.
The first exchange using the Strowger switch was opened in La Porte, Indiana in 1892 and initially subscribers had a button on their telephone to produce the required number of pulses by tapping. An associate of Strowgers' invented the rotary dial in 1896 which replaced the button. In 1943, Philadelphia was the last major area to give up dual service (rotary and button).
A quickly look to the history about the phone origins, later is a long walk through how the phone is used nowadays, how it gradually was replaced by mobile phones, what have changed and what is next for this useful "tool" in the near future.
domingo, 10 de abril de 2011
jueves, 7 de abril de 2011
lunes, 14 de marzo de 2011
Primer Informe
First report
HISTORY OF TELECOMMUNICATIONS “PHONE EVOLUTION”
Mallely Cano Mira
María Yesenia Rúa
Yanet Chaverra
Yeison Piedrahíta
Edixon Gutiérrez
Tabla de contenido
1. PRESENTATION---Yeison Piedrahita
2. INTRODUCTION---Mallely Cano
3. TELECOMUNICATIONS HISTORY---Yanet Chaverra
4. PHONE’S HISTORY----Yesenia Rua
5. EVOLUTION----Edixon Gutierrez
The five members will participate in the exposition using visual aids (slides), dialogues and a small representation of how we communicated in the past.
BRIEF INTRODUCTION
The human species is social, that is, requires communication, since otherwise we would live completely isolated. Thus, from the origins of the species, the communication was evolving into the most sophisticated technology, to achieve closer spaces and greater speed in the process.
Telecommunications are responsible for the transport of information over long distances through a channel of communication by signs of any kind.
The telecommunications mission is to carry as much information as quickly and safe as possible.
The telecommunications mission is to carry as much information as quickly and safe as possible.
miércoles, 23 de febrero de 2011
Grupo Alex2
Yeison Piedrahita
Mallely Cano
Yanet Chaverra
Edixon Gutierrez
Yesenia Rua
Why is important the communication?
Mallely Cano
Yanet Chaverra
Edixon Gutierrez
Yesenia Rua
Why is important the communication?
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