登陆注册
5562900000028

第28章 CHAPTER IV THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE ART(8)

"This may make your fortune," he said, "but no mechanic in Toledo can make a proper model of it for you. You must go to Chicago, where telegraphic apparatus is made." The boy gladly took his advice and went to the Western Electric factory in Chicago. Here he accidentally met Enos M. Barton, the head of the factory. Barton noted that the boy was a genius and offered him a job, which he accepted and has held ever since. Such is the story of the entrance of Charles E. Scribner into the telephone business, where he has been well-nigh indispensable.

His monumental work has been the development of the MULTIPLE Switchboard, a much more brain-twisting problem than the building of the Pyramids or the digging of the Panama Canal.

The earlier types of switchboard had become too cumbersome by 1885. They were well enough for five hundred wires but not for five thousand.

In some exchanges as many as half a dozen operators were necessary to handle a single call;and the clamor and confusion were becoming unbearable. Some handier and quieter way had to be devised, and thus arose the Multiple board.

The first crude idea of such a way had sprung to life in the brain of a Chicago man named L.

B. Firman, in 1879; but he became a farmer and forsook his invention in its infancy.

In the Multiple board, as it grew up under the hands of Scribner, the outgoing wires are duplicated so as to be within reach of every operator.

A local call can thus be answered at once by the operator who receives it; and any operator who is overwhelmed by a sudden rush of business can be helped by her companions. Every wire that comes into the board is tasselled out into many ends, and by means of a "busy test," invented by Scribner, only one of these ends can be put into use at a time. The normal limit of such a board is ten thousand wires, and will always remain so, unless a race of long-armed giantesses should appear, who would be able to reach over a greater expanse of board. At present, a business of more than ten thousand lines means a second exchange.

The Multiple board was enormously expensive.

It grew more and more elaborate until it cost one-third of a million dollars. The telephone men racked their brains to produce something cheaper to take its place, and they failed.

The Multiple boards swallowed up capital as a desert swallows water, but THEY SAVED TEN SECONDSON EVERY CALL. This was an unanswerable argument in their favor, and by 1887 twenty-one of them were in use.

Since then, the switchboard has had three or four rebuildings. There has seemed to be no limit to the demands of the public or the fertility of Scribner's brain. Persistent changes were made in the system of signalling. The first signal, used by Bell and Watson, was a tap on the diaphragm with the finger-nail. Soon after-wards came a "buzzer," and then the magneto- electric bell. In 1887 Joseph O'Connell, of Chicago, conceived of the use of tiny electric lights as signals, a brilliant idea, as an electric light makes no noise and can be seen either by night or by day. In 1901, J. J. Carty invented the "bridging bell," a way to put four houses on a single wire, with a different signal for each house. This idea made the "party line" practicable, and at once created a boom in the use of the telephone by enterprising farmers.

In 1896 there came a most revolutionary change in switchboards. All things were made new. Instead of individual batteries, one at each telephone, a large common battery was installed in the exchange itself. This meant better signalling and better talking. It reduced the cost of batteries and put them in charge of experts. It established uniformity. It introduced the federal idea into the mechanism of a telephone system. Best of all, it saved FOURSECONDS ON EVERY CALL. The first of these centralizing switchboards was put in place at Philadelphia;and other cities followed suit as fast as they could afford the expense of rebuilding.

Since then, there have come some switchboards that are wholly automatic. Few of these have been put into use, for the reason that a switchboard, like a human body, must be semi-automatic only. To give the most efficient service, there will always need to be an expert to stand between it and the public.

As the final result of all these varying changes in switchboards and signals and batteries, there grew up the modern Telephone Exchange.

This is the solar plexus of the telephone body.

It is the vital spot. It is the home of the switchboard.

It is not any one's invention, as the telephone was. It is a growing mechanism that is not yet finished, and may never be; but it has already evolved far enough to be one of the wonders of the electrical world. There is probably no other part of an American city's equipment that is as sensitive and efficient as a telephone exchange.

The idea of the exchange is somewhat older than the idea of the telephone itself. There were communication exchanges before the invention of the telephone. Thomas B. Doolittle had one in Bridgeport, using telegraph instruments Thomas B. A. David had one in Pittsburg, using printing-telegraph machines, which required little skill to operate. And William A. Childs had a third, for lawyers only, in New York, which used dials at first and afterwards printing machines. These little exchanges had set out to do the work that is done to-day by the telephone, and they did it after a fashion, in a most crude and expensive way. They helped to prepare the way for the telephone, by building up small constituencies that were ready for the telephone when it arrived.

同类推荐
  • 小儿语补

    小儿语补

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 佛说菩萨投身饴饿虎起塔因缘经

    佛说菩萨投身饴饿虎起塔因缘经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 寄淮上柳十三

    寄淮上柳十三

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 憨予暹禅师语录

    憨予暹禅师语录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 巢林笔谈

    巢林笔谈

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 梦中巨人

    梦中巨人

    一个梦,一个不寻常的事件我想醒,奈何醒不了我想帮,却又被针对这真的是一个梦吗?
  • 非洲的百万富翁(双语译林)

    非洲的百万富翁(双语译林)

    《非洲的百万富翁》讲述了骗子克雷上校与查尔斯爵士斗智斗勇的故事。克雷上校通过伪装成不同的身份,如墨西哥先知、小牧师理查德·佩普洛·布拉巴宗、施莱尔马赫教授等欺骗查尔斯,令查尔斯防不胜防。而案情的揭露则是通过克雷上校在事后给查尔斯发来的羞辱信,把他实施作案的过程揭露出来的。最终,克雷上校受到了法律的制裁。
  • 火爆医妃别想逃

    火爆医妃别想逃

    她是21世纪顶级军医,一朝穿越沦为人人踩踏的将军府大小姐!庶妹狠毒陷害,庶母想将她置之死地?翻手覆雨之间,强势归来,那些视她如草芥之人她一个都不会放过!斗渣妹夺权势,只是这身边一直跟着她的无赖是谁?“一日为奴终身为妻!”夜辰戏虐般曲解,什么狗屁道理!所以她有了大胆的计划,逃离这个危险的男人!--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 影响力:非凡主控与引导的艺术

    影响力:非凡主控与引导的艺术

    优秀、卓越之人往往具有非凡的影响力。凭此,他们在人际交往中左右逢源,在谈笑间引导、改变他人,从而在一定程度上掌控局势的发展。影响力是优秀、卓越的重要组成元素,是每个不甘平庸、渴望优秀、有所作为的人都应该自我培养的关键能力之一。《影响力:非凡主控与引导的艺术》由廖振宇编著,凝聚强大的气场,让他人乐于被引导,被改变:掌控局势主动权,摆脱平庸现状,走向非凡人生。提升影响力,从合格到优秀,再到卓越的个人成长之路,从平庸到成功,再到辉煌的成功之路。
  • 用故事培养孩子的好品质

    用故事培养孩子的好品质

    品格教育对人生的发展,有决定性的影响。当世界变化的速度愈来愈快,未来将面临的竞争与挑战愈来愈严苛的时候,为孩子培养美好的品格,是父母给他最珍贵的礼物了,因为充满挑战的二十一世纪,是属于善良、正直、诚实、勇于承担责任的人。本书从培育孩子“好品质”的方法入手,通过生动幽默的故事,深入浅出地引用了大量古今中外培养孩子品质的理论和经验,有针对性地阐述了孩子成长过程中的“品质”问题,并予以解决,极具实用价值。可以说是成就孩子一生的教子经典。希望这本书能给有心培养孩子好品质的家长以实质性的帮助。
  • 鱼肉刀俎

    鱼肉刀俎

    这里是光怪陆离的空间,在这个现代社会里却有着不为人知的黑科技和千奇百怪的异能。她乃将门之女,四岁丢失,通兽言,流落在外十六年,如今混迹在无数动物之间,自言‘叛徒’,冷眼旁观才是她的习惯。他是科技领袖,公司员工和家佣全都是仿真机器人,奈何苏醒百年只一心修行,不问世事。追击残杀动物的团伙时,不可避免的交错,她忘记一切,而他却渐渐想起,上辈子的因造成了今天的果,现在的模样又是谁当初的决绝,‘焚零’不过是焚尽一切后回归到零。请注意,这不是恋爱小说但不可避免有恋爱情节,这只是一个人倾尽所有做着别人眼中偏执又疯狂的动物事业。
  • 宝宝我们拐个总裁爹

    宝宝我们拐个总裁爹

    “云飞,我已经怀孕了!”“拿掉!去医院拿掉!你以为我会为了这个意外孩子,回到你的身边吗?!”牵手十年,她本以为他是她的港湾。可是他却让她怀着近四个月身孕,眼睁睁的看着未婚夫闪电结婚,而她完完全全是个局外人!
  • 追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    青涩蜕变,如今她是能独当一面的女boss,爱了冷泽聿七年,也同样花了七年时间去忘记他。以为是陌路,他突然向他表白,扬言要娶她,她只当他是脑子抽风,他的殷勤她也全都无视。他帮她查她父母的死因,赶走身边情敌,解释当初拒绝她的告别,和故意对她冷漠都是无奈之举。突然爆出她父母的死居然和冷家有丝毫联系,还莫名跳出个公爵未婚夫,扬言要与她履行婚约。峰回路转,破镜还能重圆吗? PS:我又开新文了,每逢假期必书荒,新文《有你的世界遇到爱》,喜欢我的文的朋友可以来看看,这是重生类现言,对这个题材感兴趣的一定要收藏起来。
  • 变色蝴蝶

    变色蝴蝶

    公司女职员梦琪一次走在大街上因为尿急看到了常人看不到的古老树洞,进入之后发现了另一番神奇景象、神秘人物。树洞里的神秘人物白天多数会以一个正常人的状态去生活工作,唯一不同的是她们的下眼睑多了两只看似别致妆容的蝴蝶。晚上又会变为树洞里的神秘人物。这些人穿梭于现实与神秘世界中,而眼睑下的蝴蝶因为她们的各种行为在悄无声息地发生着变化,不仅如此,还掀起了一波又一波的大战……
  • 梧冈集

    梧冈集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。