This caught my eye & I thought I would pass it along. I have fond memories of proofing my monthly magazine pages via curled up thermal faxes, holding them flat with weights. Faxes, at that time, were faster than waiting for blue line proofs to arrive.
Once at the communications forefront, Faxing has mostly disappeared. But, its use persists in law-enforcement, real estate and health care. A mix of regulatory confusion, digital-security concerns and “Old habits die hard” have kept fax machines in use.
Faxes have an old, long and interesting history:
Once at the communications forefront, Faxing has mostly disappeared. But, its use persists in law-enforcement, real estate and health care. A mix of regulatory confusion, digital-security concerns and “Old habits die hard” have kept fax machines in use.
Faxes have an old, long and interesting history:
- An early fax was sent over telegraph lines in London in 1847,
- Inventors, including Bain in the UK and Edison & Bell in the USA, sought to father facsimile technology,
- Jules Verne, writing in 1863, imagined Paris in the 1960s would be replete with fax machines, referring to them as “picture-telegraphs”—transmitting copies of messages & images instantly over wires was a dream.