Our website is made possible by displaying online advertisements to our visitors.
Please consider supporting us by disabling your ad blocker.

Responsive image


Telautograph

An early telautograph machine

The telautograph is an ancestor of the modern fax machine. It transmits electrical signals representing the position of a pen or tracer at the sending station to repeating mechanisms attached to a pen at the receiving station, thus reproducing at the receiving station a drawing, writing, or signature made by the sender. It was the first such device to transmit drawings to a stationary sheet of paper; previous inventions[1][2] in Europe had used a constantly moving strip of paper to make such transmissions and the pen could not be lifted between words. Surprisingly, at least from a modern perspective, some early telautographs used digital/pulse-based transmission while later more successful devices reverted to analog signaling.

  1. ^ "The Writing Telegraph" (PDF). Scientific American. 40 (13): 196. March 1879.
  2. ^ "Cowper's Writing Telegraph" (PDF). Scientific American. 40 (13): 197. March 1879.

Previous Page Next Page






Teleautograf Czech Télautographe French Teleautografo Italian 텔레오토그래프 Korean Teleautograf Polish Телеавтограф Russian

Responsive image

Responsive image