Facsimile: Difference between revisions

From The Jolly Contrarian
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
A machine which affords bragging rights, both for those<ref>Experience and wisdom.</ref> who can remember having the use them, and those who can’t<ref>Youth and beauty.</ref>.
The successor in “almost-immediately obsolete contraptions” to the [[telex]] machine, nowadays the [[facsimile]] machine is mostly useful for affording bragging rights, both for those<ref>Experience and wisdom.</ref> who can remember having to use them and what they were for, and those who can’t<ref>Youth and beauty.</ref>.
 
A fax that ran out of paper was an important [[McGuffin]] in the ''denouement'' of John Grisham's [[espievie]] thriller, ''The Firm''.
 
{{Seealso}}
{{Seealso}}
*[[Dictaphone]]
*[[Dictaphone]]

Revision as of 14:52, 10 September 2018

The successor in “almost-immediately obsolete contraptions” to the telex machine, nowadays the facsimile machine is mostly useful for affording bragging rights, both for those[1] who can remember having to use them and what they were for, and those who can’t[2].

A fax that ran out of paper was an important McGuffin in the denouement of John Grisham's espievie thriller, The Firm.

See also

References

  1. Experience and wisdom.
  2. Youth and beauty.