Sucking dick and being gay, as he liked it up the butt.
The land telegraph was invented by Samuel Finley Breese Morse, in the 1830s I think. He built this thing that when a button was pushed at one place, it could cause a clacker to go clack at the other end of a wire many miles long. In order to send information over it, he invented a code of clacks for each letter of the alphabet ... which he modestly called Morse's Code.
It's really a question of opinion, but I would say Samuel F. B. Morse, because he invented the telegraph, which was the first way to instantaneously see a message being written for you on the other side of the country, or even on another continent, perhaps the other side of the world if the wire ran there.
The word "kiss" is "-.- .. ... ..." in Morse. However to make things quicker, the international signal for kisses is "88". Just like adding two kisses at the bottom of a letter or text message. "88" is translated as "---.. ---.." in Morse. It must always be two eights. One or three eights mean nothing other than a number.
Fairly self-explanatory really. Vocal communication is using the voice, non-vocal is communicating by other means such as semaphore, Morse code, email, fax etc !
Telegrams these days are different than telegrams "in the old days". You can still send telegrams all over the world, in a couple of hours if necessary. The big difference's is the way telegrams are send over the world. In earlier days telegrams where send by the telegraph-lines with Morse codes. At the other side of the line these codes where translated to words again and brought by messenger to the receiver. Today we don't use Morse codes anymore, but telegrams are still very important. You can use telegrams to congratulate someone, to send your deepest sympathy or wish someone much luck. Any occasion you can think of, a telegram will bring the message!
Aside from his experimentation on the telegraph, Samuel Morse made money in his part time occupation of fine art. He was a success in this and each year he made money through the sale of his paintings.
The land telegraph was invented by Samuel F. B. Morse, in the 1830s I think. He built this thing that when a button was pushed at one place, it could cause a clacker to go clack at the other end of a wire many miles long. In order to send information over it, he invented a code of clacks for each letter of the alphabet ... which he modestly called Morse's Code. The message sent as the first public demonstration was "What hath god wrought".
A statue of Samual Morse can be found at the entrance of Inventor's Gate on the east side of Central Park at 72nd Street, New York City. Byron M. Picket's appropriately placed 1871 statue of Samuel Morse is standing next to his most renowned invention, the electric telegraph. With one hand on his invention the other displays a strip of Morse Code.
In his adulthood, Samuel Morse primarily lived in New York City. He moved there in the early 19th century, where he became a prominent painter and later an inventor. Morse also spent time in Washington, D.C., and other locations due to his work and travels, but New York remained his main residence.
The computer is successfully outdated the electric telegraph that many people didn't know. An electric telegraph is one of communication devices that were invented in 1794 by Claude Chappe but the first successful telegraph is on 1830s and 1840s by Samuel Morse and other inventors.
The land telegraph was invented by Samuel F. B. Morse, in the 1830s I think.He built this thing that when a button was pushed at one place, it could cause a clacker to go clack at the other end of a wire many miles long. In order to send information over it, he invented a code of clacks for each letter of the alphabet ... which he modestly called Morse's Code.
Samuel Finley Breese Morse has written: 'Samuel Finley Breese Morse papers' -- subject(s): American Art, American Portrait painting, Immigrants, Slavery, Abolitionists, European Art, Architecture, British Art, Patents, History, Correspondence, Nativism, Art, Patents law and legislation, Study and teaching, Italian Art, Anti-Catholicism, Photography, Germans, Telegraph 'Samuel F.B. Morse' 'Academies of arts' -- subject(s): Art, Art schools, Study and teaching 'Samuel F. B. Morse His Letters and Journals Volume II' 'Foreign conspiracy against the liberties of the United States' -- subject(s): Catholic Church, Politics and government, Controversial literature, Church and state, Anti-Catholicism 'Lectures on the affinity of painting with the other fine arts' -- subject(s): Painting, Schilderkunst 'Fine arts' -- subject(s): Art, Art schools, National Academy of Design (U.S.), Study and teaching 'Samuel F.B. Morse' -- subject(s): Accessible book, Exhibitions, Telegraph, History 'Samuel F. B. Morse His Letters and Journals Volume I' 'Samuel F.B. Morse, his letters and journals' -- subject(s): Telegraph 'His letters and journals' 'The electro-magnetic telegraph' -- subject(s): Telegraph
Morse code or morse is a code used for sending messages. It represents each letter of the alphabet using short and long sounds or flashes of light, which can be written down as dots and dashes. Samuel F.B. Morse helped invent Morse code so the name came after him.
The practical electric telegraph system was invented by Samuel Morse in 1837. After Joseph Henry discovered electric induction in 1831, enabling further development in electrical telegraphy, the first practical telegraph was invented by Dr. David Alter of Elderton, Pennsylvania, in 1836. It wasn't until 1837 that Samuel F.B. Morse would successfully invent the electric telegraph which would become commercially successful. He did so with the help of financier and assistant Alfred Vail. The Morse-Vail Code would become the international standard mode of communication on the high seas, until Morse Code as well as the S.O.S. distress call were disbanded in 1999. One reason for the success of Morse's system was that it could be operated over a single wire of lesser quality, and over a long distance. Telegraph wires were strung along railroad lines in many areas. The telegraph was invented by Samuel Morse in the late 1830's. I am not certain why Wikipedia and other sources discount the Morse invention, which is the practical form that every person thinks of when the word telegraph is mentioned. The fact that W.F. Cooke set up a London electric security relay system (and that Dr. Alter had a telegraph in his yard) does not nearly have the value as Morse's system (financed by Vail), that enabled mass communication on a scale never seen to that point in time, both nationally and internationally.
The land telegraph was invented by Samuel F. B. Morse, in the 1830s I think. He built this thing that when a button was pushed at one place, it could cause a clacker to go clack at the other end of a wire many miles long. In order to send information over it, he invented a code of clacks for each letter of the alphabet ... which he modestly called Morse's Code.
he influenced the world by faster communication during the 1800's so that people wouldn't have to struggle in communication with other people.
Ok so there was a lot of inventions in world war 2 like TV invented to send secret messages to the soldiers without other people relizing it or noticing it!!!!!! Yes, Morse code was the best invention so soldiers and their family could write to each other!