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A Short History of Communication Part 1

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Published on: June 12, 2004

With all the exciting developments in the realm of communications technology over the last few years it would be easy to think that we are living in times of the most astounding transformations. However, the technologies that so many of us are addicted to today – mobile phones, the internet, satellite TV – are built on the achievements of our ancestors. The history of communication goes back thousands of years. Each new development has transformed the world we live in. An understanding of the journey we have taken to get where we are now shows that today’s techniques are refinements of what came before. Really big revolutions may be still to come.

Early technologies

Communication begins with the first conversations between people – it is believed that language developed through gestures using the hands and body, and had evolved into spoken tongues by the time of the great migration of humans
from Africa some 100,000 years ago. The first long distance communication must have arisen shortly after conversation, with the discovery that it was possible to make oneself heard from a distance by shouting, or banging objects together
to make a sound that travels far. Fire and the smoke it produces may also have been used for simple communication between separated groups.

Writing and the storage of information

Communication techniques such as shouting and smoke signals allow people to make their mark over a wider area. The recording of information allowed human beings to communicate over great expanses of time. Cave paintings up to 36,500
years old have been found – people from that far back are communicating with us today (although it is hard to know what they were saying). 5,500 years ago, more systematised alphabets were developed by the Phoenicians, Sumerians and Egyptians. They also developed new ways of storing their information, some of which have survived till today. Scholars have had some success in translating these alphabets and the languages they convey, giving us insight into societies
long dead.

The realisations that it is possible to communicate through space and time are the two most important communication leaps in history. Everything that has come since has merely improved the efficiency of these two tasks.

Early postal services

The next leap was the combination of writing and transmitting information. This began with people or animals acting as couriers, delivering written messages. The first postal services were in China around 900BC. Human runners and birds were used to transport messages starting in at least 776BC, when the winner of the Olympic games was reported to the Athenians via homing pigeons – possible the first journalist reporting back to base from a remote location!

Long distance instant transmission

Getting messages over long distances took time, and it wasn’t long before people were discovering new ways of reducing this time. The first communication at the speed of light was as far back as 37BC, when the Romans used large mirrors to flash messages from Emperor Tiberius over long distances – a method known as the Heliograph.

Printing – mass reproduction -> mass distribution

The invention of the printing press in China some time after 300AD meant that the same message could be delivered to many people cheaply and more quickly than copying out the message many times by hand. This led to the first distribution
systems, a development which has allowed the flourishing of newspapers such as the one you now hold in your hands.

At the speed of electricity

With the discovery of electricity the speed and range of communication once again began to increase. In 1793 Claude Chappe invented the Semaphore telegraph line, which allowed reliable and fast communication over wires between distant
locations. Methods such as the Heliograph which require two locations being able to see each other limited the possible distance of rapid communications. The semaphore broke through this barrier, opening the way for even more radical
developments.

The invention of techniques such as Morse code allowed complex messages to be transferred at very high speeds over this new medium. This had huge repercussions for many aspects of human life – transport could be better coordinated, government could transmit decisions to distant offices almost instantaneously, businesses could work with more businesses over larger distances.

These first implementations of electronic communication opened the door for many of the technologies we take for granted – television, radio, telephones and the internet. Next week I will continue this short journey through or communications history, and look into my crystal ball at some possible future developments.

Interesting Sites


Local IT News

A&A Computers have announced improvements to their online catalogue. Prices are now automatically kept up to date, and it is possible to tell if they have what you need in stock directly from the web site.

Originally published in Arusha Times 324

Studs

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Published on: June 10, 2004

This is where I keep my studs.

Street Drunk

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Published on: June 10, 2004

This man in a suit passed out in the doorway opposite chez nous. A couple of hours later the police came and took him away.

Is this you?

Mutation

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Published on: June 10, 2004

Help. A giant kitten getting ready to stomp my new antique wardrobe…

Toilet Makeover

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Published on: June 9, 2004

Continuing a tradition started with my over excited fridge pictures, which incidentaly were almost a year ago, indicating some kind of strange biorythmic clock ticking inside me turning me into a periodic domestic… something.

Here for your understanding is our new toilet, before and after a makeover. Gasp in horror at the bandaged and soiled state of the old toilet seat. Delight in the gleaming sparklingness of the new
antique pine effect toilet seat
in a sea of cleanliness. So clean you could eat your dinner out of it, as long as you don’t mind the taste of bleach.

Now all we need is a fresh toilet brush to scrub those bars away…

Lunch

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Published on: June 9, 2004

Oh, how the mighty have fallen – has it come to this?

  • Take two slices of Rye Bread
  • Smear Hellmans “Real” Mayonaise on each one, thick as you like
  • Cut four slices of Tesco Organic Mature Cheddar and tesalate on bread
  • Take a few pinches of thinly sliced ham, and arrange on top of the cheese
  • Squeeze a bottle of Branston Pickle, sandwich edition, till it explodes violently over your sandwich
  • Lid the sandwich and cut into two pieces

Voila!

ID Card

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Published on: June 8, 2004

Here is my new biometric ID card:

This card has been produced as part of the UKPS Biometrics Enrolment Trial. It does not constitute evidence of identity, confer any benefit on the holder, or preclude the holder from biometrics enrolment should that be introduced for passport applications and renewals.

Not very useful then…

ID Card Grafitti

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Published on: June 7, 2004

Spotted this piece of anti-id card grafitti on the bridge by Shoreditch tube station. An interesting extrapolation of what ID cards and the accompanying technology might lead to in terms of the public relationship with government and the state.

Of course, it starts with the other, with people that don’t have the right to defend themselves – those here on assylum, those seeking it and others in apparently weak and insecure situations. Then everyone gets used to it, and the next we know we all have “entitlement cards”, and need them in order to survive.

I am not a number

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Published on: June 7, 2004

Tomorrow I will have my biometrics taken by the UK passport office trial of biometrics, which is being used as the government to trial the enrollment process for National ID cards. Something I am totally against.

ID cards force us to replace the standards of trust we currently have, based on judging people on the basis of what we know about them, how we judge their behaviour and other non technical methods that we all use every day in our interactions with other people.

The government proposes to replace these standards with a plastic card with a chip mounted on it. Something we will not understand. We will all have to join queues every five years in order to obtain one of these cards. Whilst the government will not actively pursue anyone who refuses to take a card, such people will have reduced access to public services they are currently legally entitled to and pay for through taxes one way or another.

ID cards will not rescue us from terrorism. They will not prevent illegal working and tragedies like Morcambe Bay. They will not prevent illegal immigration. They will not prevent identity fraud. ID cards will not have a significant impact on any of these things.

This is not an issue of people not having anything to fear if they have nothing to hide. I don’t have anything to hide. But that doesn’t mean I have to show everything. There is a difference between secrecy and privacy, and it is the difference that we exercise when we:

  • close our curtains whilst getting undressed
  • go ex-directory
  • don’t respond to a survey

ID cards will make us all immigrants in our own country. We will have to prove our right to be here. We will be made to jump through the same hoops. The government will make us apply to be British Citizens. Imagine if they turn you down.

ID cards were got rid of fifty years ago because they were a bad idea. Now technology businesses are lobbying the government trying to sell biometric systems as a knee jerk solution to complex problems. Knee jerk politicians such as David Blunkett seem to have had the concept sold to them. But it is people like you and me that will have to live with the results. Say No2ID!

Imprisoner image courtesy of Infinite Ideas Machine.

Cannabis March

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Published on: June 5, 2004

Stewarded at the Legalise Cannabis March. Unfortunately camera batteries ran out pretty early on. Was a very good event. A smallish march compared to other years, but a very busy park with music from Alabama 3 amongst others.

Only one person was arrested – an angry onlooker who decided to try and push the man dressed up as a giant pot leaf on stilts over.

Stewarding was nice – good to be involved somehow in such things…

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