5 comments

  • andyjohnson0 18 minutes ago

    An interesting book on the subject of telegraph networks is The Victorian Internet by Tom Standage [1]. As well as the technical and commercial drivers, it also describes how the telegraph forced people to confront concepts like simultaneity, information being distinct from its physical medium, privacy, early approaches to encryption, etc. A fascinating book.

    [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Victorian_Internet

  • teleforce 26 minutes ago

    Fun facts, the subsea telegraph network cables coating were made from Gutta Percha [1].

    Unlike normal rubber, it is a type of thermoplastic and it's a popular organic plastic before the petroleum based modern plastic become pervasive [2].

    [1] The legacy of undersea cables:

    https://blog.sciencemuseumgroup.org.uk/the-legacy-of-underse...

    [2] Gutta-percha:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gutta-percha

  • jphoward an hour ago

    Here is some more information: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/All_Red_Line

    And one of the old cable huts still exists: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pacific_Cable_Station

  • neillyons 35 minutes ago

    When visiting Ayers Rock in Australia I stayed in Alice Springs. While I was there I learnt that Alice Springs exists because it was a repeater station for a telegraph line that stretched from Southern Australia all the way to London. There would be people listening to morse code, and tapping it out again to the next repeater station. Blew my mind that there was a wire that went all the way to London from Australia!

      dboreham 29 minutes ago

      Similar history for Denver.