MUSEUM OF THE FALLEN
Dominance is not eternal.

Operators working teletype (telex) machines, a U.S. Army photograph from World War II.

U.S. Army, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons · Public domain

Lost Technology

Telex

1933 CE 2010 CE

A global typewriter network that let two distant machines hold a printed conversation, decades before email did the same.

Born
1933 CE
Died
2010 CE
Lived
77 years
Dead for
16 yrs
At its peak
Millions of telex subscribers worldwide at the 1980s peak
Cause of death
Replaced
Replaced by
Fax, then email and electronic data interchange
The Obituary

Telex was a switched network of teleprinters — typewriters that talked to each other over phone-style connections. Launched in Germany in 1933 and spreading worldwide, it let a business in one country type a message that printed instantly on a machine in another, each subscriber reachable by a telex number. Because messages carried an answerback code confirming the receiving machine, telex became the legally trusted channel for banks, shipping firms, and newsrooms. It was slow and used a stripped-down character set, but it was reliable. Fax, then email, offered the same reach with images and full text, and national telex networks shut down through the 1990s and 2000s.

Worth remembering

  • Each subscriber had a unique 'telex number' and an answerback code to confirm identity.
  • A telex message was legally admissible, making it the trusted channel for shipping and banking.

Sources

  1. Telex switched teleprinter network began in Germany in 1933 Wikipedia
  2. Telex used teleprinters and Baudot/ITA2 code over a switched network Britannica

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

Buried nearby