MUSEUM OF THE FALLEN
Dominance is not eternal.

The final broadcast frame of BBC Ceefax, the teletext service, as it closed down in 2012.

BBC Ceefax, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons · Public domain

Lost Technology

Teletext

Ceefax · ORACLE · Videotext · Aertel
1974 CE 2012 CE

Broadcast text news delivered in the gaps between TV frames — pages of news, weather, and TV listings available at the press of a button — served millions of European households for nearly 40 years until the web made it irrelevant.

Born
1974 CE
Died
2012 CE
Lived
38 years
Dead for
14 yrs
At its peak
Two million teletext-equipped TV sets in the UK alone by 1982; available as a standard option on almost every European TV set by the mid-1980s
Cause of death
Replaced
Replaced by
World Wide Web / internet news services
The Obituary

Teletext worked by encoding text and simple graphics into unused scan lines in a standard television broadcast signal — the vertical blanking interval that appeared as a black bar when a TV rolled. A decoder chip in the television captured these data streams and displayed numbered pages on request. BBC’s Ceefax launched in September 1974; ITV’s ORACLE followed. By 1982 two million UK households had teletext TVs; by the mid-1980s it was standard equipment on nearly every European set. Pages covered news headlines, sports results, weather, TV schedules, and financial data — functions that the web would later perform, but available with no internet connection and essentially zero latency once a page loaded.

The World Wide Web began eroding teletext’s purpose from the late 1990s. News organisations migrated online; younger viewers went to the web for the same information faster and with more depth. Teletext lingered because it remained free with a TV licence and required no separate subscription or hardware — but as analogue broadcasting was switched off across Europe, the platform disappeared with it. BBC Ceefax went dark in October 2012 after 38 years. Ireland’s Aertel outlasted it by a decade, finally closing in October 2023. The format never took hold in North America, where cable made the broadcast bandwidth less scarce and the technical investment was never made.

Worth remembering

  • Teletext pages were broadcast on a continuous cycle — selecting a page number meant waiting for it to rotate back around, sometimes 20–30 seconds — a design constraint that shaped the entire editorial format toward short, scannable updates.
  • BBC Ceefax page 301 (sport) and page 302 (football results) were some of the most-watched pages in British broadcasting during the 1980s and 1990s, checked at halftime and full-time by viewers who could not wait for the evening news.

Sources

  1. BBC Ceefax launched September 23, 1974; two million teletext sets in the UK by 1982; Ceefax closed in 2012 Wikipedia
  2. The World Wide Web began to take over some of the functions of teletext from the late 1990s; teletext was available as an option on almost every European TV set by the mid-1980s Wikipedia
  3. Teletext uses the vertical blanking interval to send text and simple graphic information; widely adopted in Europe, relatively obscure in North America Encyclopaedia Britannica

A graveyard tradition: leave a stone to show you came, and remembered.

Buried nearby