fax


How facsimile messages are transmitted from one remote fax machine to another, with the aid of communications satellite technology.
Transmission of images over a telecommunications link, usually the telephone network. When placed on a fax machine, the original image is scanned by a transmitting device and converted into coded signals, which travel via the telephone lines to the receiving fax machine, where an image is created that is a copy of the original. Photographs as well as printed text and drawings can be sent.
| Alexander Bain, a Scottish mechanic, invented facsimile transmission over wires in 1843. His fax machine transmitter scanned a flat metal surface using a stylus mounted on a pendulum. Images on the surface of the metal were picked up by the stylus and could be transmitted via telegraph to a similar machine at the other end of the wire. The technique was limited in that documents to be sent had first to be transcribed onto a metal plate. |
| The world's first practical fax machine, the pantélégraphe, was invented by Italian physicist Giovanni Caselli in 1866, over a century before the first electronic model came on the market. Standing over 2 m/6.5 ft high, it transmitted by telegraph nearly five thousand handwritten documents and drawings between Paris and Lyon in its first year. |
| Various inventors improved upon the fax design until in 1924, the American Telephone & Telegraph Company (AT&T) developed their telephotography machine that was able to transmit photographs along long-distance telephone cables. On 4 March 1955, the first radio facsimile transmission was sent across the breadth of the USA. |
| The fax machine has continually been upgraded and is still in widespread use, either as a stand-alone machine, as a combination phone/fax system, or as an integral part of a PC system. |