A telex machine typically consists of several key parts: a keyboard for typing messages, a printer for producing hard copies of the transmitted text, and a receiving unit that decodes incoming signals. It also includes a tape reader or punch for storing messages on paper tape and a control panel for managing functions. Additionally, a modem connects the telex machine to the telecommunication network, enabling the transmission of messages over long distances.
with a fax machine. But now fax has been replaced by email.
A telex machine is a teleprinter used for sending and receiving written messages over long distances via landline telecommunication network. It was commonly used for international business communication before the popularity of fax machines and email.
If you mean a telex machine, it has a keyboard like a typewriter and also has a printer. That is why it is also known as a "teleprinter". If you know someone you want to send a message to has a similar telex machine, you can set up a call to their "telex service number", just like a telephone call but with no speech. Then you can type in your message and the the telex machine at the other end of the line will print it out.telexThe international telegraphic message-transfer service consisting of a network of teleprinters. Subscribers to a telex service can exchange textual communications and data directly with one another. Telex systems originated in Europe in the early 1930s and were widely used for several decades. The ability to conduct high-speed digital communication over regular telephone lines led to a decline in the use of telex, but it is still used as a data transmission service for applications in which high transmission speeds are not necessary or in areas where more modern data equipment is not available.Source: Britannica Concise Encyclopedia.
Telex machines are still used. Not widely, and their days are numbered, but they still play an important role. 1. In parts of the banking and financial system they are still used for some types of trade and confirmation, because telex messages are legal documents unlike faxes or emails. Both sender and recipient are formally identified (they have to be subscribers to the telex network), neither party can deny the transmission (the sender can't claim that they didn't send it, nor the recipient that they didn't receive it), and the message can't be faked. 2. Ocean-going ships are still required to have telex machines, as a safety requirement. 3. In remote parts of Africa, telex is still the most reliable (and often only) form of government and administrative communication. The very low bandwidth means telex can work in places where voice and internet cannot, such as over low quality radio or microwave connections.
telex has almost disappeared, superseded by the fax machine and email. The advantage over telegraph is that ordinary people could read the output (Latin alphabet cf. Morse code), and over the telephone that there was a written record and the recipient did not need to be present to receive a message. The disadvantages are, I think, that it is expensive and requires special phone connections.
Sir John Robinson invented telex
Telex Communications was created in 1936.
Planet Telex was created in 1995-02.
telex code of Barclay dubai
parts of a polygraph machine
i dont know that much, and i dont even know what is a telex......
i dont know that much, and i dont even know what is a telex......