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From http://www.hffax.de/html/hauptteil_faxhistory.htm
1888 The Gray National Telautograph Company originated in 1888 when the company bought the patent for the first Telautograph (today known as facsimile) instrument from Omnifax founding father, Professor Elisha Gray. According to the patent, the invention enabled “one to transmit his own handwriting to a distant point over a two-wire circuit". Gray had received much notoriety two years earlier for being just three hours late in filing his patent for the invention of the telephone.
Grays's Telautograph was the first facsimile that wrote on stationary paper. This transmission to the Police in 1893 was the first public exhibition of the Telautograph. This “Standard” model also drew record crowds at the 1893 Chicago World's Fair.
Looking at BBC http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/8253236.stm it seems this was reported at the time on Tomorrow’s World see
“Fax frenzy
I do remember being very excited by the fax machine.
If I could get a map from the studio to America "down an ordinary phone line" then I could get scripts from my home in Newbury to the Tomorrow's World office.”
In 1865 Italian physics professor Giovanni Caselli established the first commercial fax system, which linked Paris and several other French cities, using a device called a Pantèlègraphe which was a modification of Alexander Bain's original idea. He transmited nearly 5,000 faxes in the first year.
When was “Tomorrow’s World” started and how was it broadcast before the invention of TV? I though it was first broadcast around 1986 I would have thought that was around 100 years too late?
1888 The Gray National Telautograph Company originated in 1888 when the company bought the patent for the first Telautograph (today known as facsimile) instrument from Omnifax founding father, Professor Elisha Gray. According to the patent, the invention enabled “one to transmit his own handwriting to a distant point over a two-wire circuit". Gray had received much notoriety two years earlier for being just three hours late in filing his patent for the invention of the telephone.
Grays's Telautograph was the first facsimile that wrote on stationary paper. This transmission to the Police in 1893 was the first public exhibition of the Telautograph. This “Standard” model also drew record crowds at the 1893 Chicago World's Fair.
Looking at BBC http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/8253236.stm it seems this was reported at the time on Tomorrow’s World see
“Fax frenzy
I do remember being very excited by the fax machine.
If I could get a map from the studio to America "down an ordinary phone line" then I could get scripts from my home in Newbury to the Tomorrow's World office.”
In 1865 Italian physics professor Giovanni Caselli established the first commercial fax system, which linked Paris and several other French cities, using a device called a Pantèlègraphe which was a modification of Alexander Bain's original idea. He transmited nearly 5,000 faxes in the first year.
When was “Tomorrow’s World” started and how was it broadcast before the invention of TV? I though it was first broadcast around 1986 I would have thought that was around 100 years too late?