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Phil Kane wrote:
On Mon, 24 Mar 2008 18:13:01 EDT, AF6AY wrote: The only problem there is that it ALSO is a 'set-up' kind of 'test' (any touch-typist on a TTY would 'win') and has very little entertainment value. My secretary at March AFB (early 1960s) could and did type faster than the Model 28 could cut tape. It frustrated her no end. My cohort at the old U.S. Embassy in Guinea-Bissau and I could jam one up as well. Nothing like poking tape on numerous multi-page outgoing cables five or six days per week to build typing speed and technique. The 28's were set up so that we never saw what we typed appear on paper. If you really wanted to check your work, you'd have to gather up the perf tape and look at it. Those machines were replaced just after I left Bissau in late 1987. I took the very last State Department 28 in Africa out of service in Sierra Leone in 1990. We had to destroy the innards, but a colleague wanted the cabinet. He re-worked the thing and turned it into a bar in his living room. His wife arrived at post a couple of months later and the new bar was quickly relegated to the fellow's ham shack. During my early time at State, most places were using Teletype Model 40 equipment with the three 8" disk drives and the fastest, most rugged impact printer I'd ever seen. That stuff was gradually replaced by computer equipment in the 1987 to 1992 time frame. I ran a Model 15 in Cincy and also had a Model 33 for a while. I wanted a 28 with the 3-speed gear shift badly. W8JIN offered me one long after I'd begun using a Commodore C-64. I gave it about thirty seconds thought before rejecting it as too big and heavy. Len's point about touch typists winning a speed contest with Morse ops would depend entirely upon how fast the typist was. The second junior op I had in Bissau would have been lucky to do 30 wpm on a keyboard. With the teletype model 40 stuff, there was not any typing of cables at all. Secretaries typed the cable and they were fed into an OCR. The operator might have to correct a formatting error or the occasional misread character. With the advent of the classified LAN's and the computerized equipment, drafters would electronically release cable text and addressees to the communications center and the ops would send the messages. Incoming traffic was routed in the same way, mostly automatically. Anything not understood by the computer would route to a 'spill que' to be manually assigned action and info offices. Occasionally the Deputy Chief of Mission would telephone or e-mail a request that the action office for a given cable be changed. By then, part of our work involved keeping message router databases (the military addressees--especially Navy--could change frequently) up to date. The computerization was supposed to result in the paperless office. It didn't. The stuff was just printed somewhere other than in the comm center. Dave K8MN |
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