Luxist Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: fax machine history

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Fax - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fax

    The roll was inserted into a compartment in the machine. Fax (short for facsimile ), sometimes called telecopying or telefax (short for telefacsimile ), is the telephonic transmission of scanned printed material (both text and images), normally to a telephone number connected to a printer or other output device.

  3. Alexander Bain (inventor) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander_Bain_(inventor)

    Auld Aisle Cemetery, Kirkintilloch, Scotland. Occupation (s) instrument inventor, technician, and clockmaker. Alexander Bain (12 October 1810 – 2 January 1877) [1] was a Scottish inventor and engineer who was first to invent and patent the electric clock. He installed the railway telegraph lines between Edinburgh and Glasgow.

  4. Giovanni Caselli - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giovanni_Caselli

    Giovanni Caselli. Giovanni Caselli (8 June 1815 – 25 April 1891) was an Italian priest, inventor, and physicist. He studied electricity and magnetism as a child which led to his invention of the pantelegraph (also known as the universal telegraph or all-purpose telegraph), the forerunner of the fax machine. The world's first practical ...

  5. Telex - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Telex

    Telex. Telex is a telecommunication service that provides text-based message exchange over the circuits of the public switched telephone network or by private lines. The technology operates on switched station-to-station basis with teleprinter devices at the receiving and sending locations. [1]

  6. Thermofax - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermofax

    Thermofax. Thermo-Fax (very often Thermo fax [1]) is 3M's trademarked name for a photocopying technology which was introduced in 1950. [2] [3] It was a form of thermographic printing and an example of a dry silver process. [4] It was a significant advance as no chemicals were required, other than those contained in the copy paper itself.

  7. Telautograph - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Telautograph

    Telautograph. 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.

  8. History of communication - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_communication

    The history of communication itself can be traced back since the origin of speech circa 100,000 BCE. [1] The use of technology in communication may be considered since the first use of symbols about 30,000 years BCE. Among the symbols used, there are cave paintings, petroglyphs, pictograms and ideograms. Writing was a major innovation, as well ...

  9. Dacom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dacom

    Dacom, Inc. was founded in 1966 by two ex- Lockheed engineers, Daniel Hochman, President, and Don Weber, Vice President, building on their pioneering work on digital image compression invented for satellite communications. [3] Their work resulted in the first commercial digital fax [4] machine and later the first sub-minute facsimile ...

  1. Ads

    related to: fax machine history