cisler on 15 Nov 2000 16:42:44 -0000 |
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Re: <nettime> Cellphones and the cancer of cellspace |
Matt Locke mentoned the service in Budapest. Here's a bit more in my selection of notes from one of my favorites books on technology. Steve Cisler Pool, Ithiel de Sola. Forecasting the telephone. Ablex1983 Norwood, NJ. Because telephones were installed in areas that could afford it, it stabilized affluent neighborhoods and separated them from deteriorating ones. p47 Telphone companies provide much of the information for urban planning. "The most direct means of approaching citizens on the planning issue was reported in Los Angeles where a battery of phone girls called everyone in the city to secure reactions, while mailing an explanatory folder."p47 p.48 The change of independent villages into satellites of cities is fostered by the telephone. >From 1900-1915 four developments undermined the autonomy of small towns and villages: parcel post, rural free delivery, the automobile, and the telephone. All of these led farmers to bank, buy, and sell in larger centers of commerce. Parcel Post was established in 1912 over the objections of small town merchant. They saw it as a subsidy to Sears Robuck. p50 In many places, every evening about 7:00 the farmers on a party line would pick up their phones and have a community meeting. The main news of the day would be read. Problems would be discussed and plans laid for joint activity. Indeed setting up the phone system itself wasoften a cooperative activity. Hendrick. "Telephone for the millions"McClure's Magazine October 1914 REA Rural Telephone Service 1960 p51 Use of phone to track commodity prices. Wm McKinley was the first whoused the telephone extensively. He ran his 1896 campaign by telephone from Canton, Ohio, including listening to the proceedings of the Republican Convention in Chicago. p.73. In Budapest a service operated from 1893 until after World War I, using a formula much like that of radio today, delivering news, mucis, financial information, and announcements to subscribers. About 1912 an unsuccessful service of the same sort wase established in Newark, NJ. p 81-2 Everyone had made erroneous predictions or missed a surge in popularity for others. The first patent for a fax was in 1843 (Alexander Bain in GB) 33 years before Bell'sinvention, but it only really caught on in the 1980's.About 1910 there was a lot of talk about the convergence of telephone and telegraphy systems and later withthat of radio, but it has not happened. S.C. Gilfillian. "The Future Home Theatre" The Independent. Oct. 17,1912. There are two mechanical contrivances...each of which bears in itself the power to revolutionize entertainment, doing for it what the printing press did for books. They are the talkingmotion picture and the electric vision apparatus with telephone. Either one will enable millions of people to see and hear the same performance simultaneously, ...or successively from kinetoscope and phonographic records...These inventions will become cheap enought tobe ...in every home...You will have the home theatre of 1930, o ye of little faith." p 121-122 Operators served as disseminators of information,primarily time and weather. NYC in the late 30's got 20 thousand weather requests and 60K time. Inthe 1980's 145K weather; time 129k. Where metering existed more information services were introduced. Paris and shanghai offered shopping info. After automatic dialing was introduced recorded information was offered to "relieve the trauma for their customers of the disappearance of the friendly operator." In general, information services declined as operators were eliminated. p130 Suzanne Keller: The telephone produces communities without contiguity. 133 Writers dating back to 1909 were shocked to discover young people using the phone for conversations of a kind in which they would not engage face to face. In the Victorian era there were many jokes about sexual happenings on the phone. p152 In 1894 Frank Perrine in Electrical Engineering noted a marked difference between electrical engineers and other engineers in the spirit of social reform. This was due in part to the unlimited horizons of electrical science. # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net