Telex

From The Jolly Contrarian
Revision as of 17:23, 9 August 2018 by Amwelladmin (talk | contribs) (Created page with "A Teleprinter exchange is the original form of data transmission, developed during the Second World War and used as a secure and reliable long distance communication. Un...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

A Teleprinter exchange is the original form of data transmission, developed during the Second World War and used as a secure and reliable long distance communication.

Unlike fax or email, Telex has full “legal document status" in every country of the world. It carries proof of RECEIPT as well as proof of sending due to its unique electronic handshake on each message. It remains a reliable communication tool with specific needs in Banking, Aviation and Maritime, and is still widely used in many secure environments including Embassies, Governments, Post Offices and Military organisations worldwide.

The days of morse code transmitted across a copper wire and a pony express waiting to deliver the message have long gone, but its satellites offer secure, controlled and unique communication needs for demanding Industries.

The internet today was based on many original telex functionalities for direct Inter-Country communication, desktop messaging and the Internet Chat type facility is the traditional telex "conversational" call.

Despite its age of service, the trusted and reliable global telex service is a requirement for today’s and tomorrows largest organisations.

For legally secure, guaranteed transmission, the telex service remains unique , from the transmission of banking "TT" (standing for telex transfer) to Maritime emergency calls, ships in distress , pirate threat to lifeboat launch , it is truly a mission critical communication platform. Billions of Dollars (USD) of financial transactions passes across the telex network every day ensuring its longevity for many years to come.


http://www.networktelex.com/faq/