登陆注册
38544000000055

第55章 CHAPTER IX THE FUTURE OF THE TELEPHONE(1)

In the Spring of 1907 Theodore N. Vail, a rugged, ruddy, white-haired man, was superintending the building of a big barn in northern Vermont. His house stood near-by, on a balcony of rolling land that overlooked the town of Lyndon and far beyond, across evergreen forests to the massive bulk of Burke Mountain. His farm, very nearly ten square miles in area, lay back of the house in a great oval of field and woodland, with several dozen cottages in the clearings. His Welsh ponies and Swiss cattle were grazing on the May grass, and the men were busy with the ploughs and harrows and seeders. It was almost thirty years since he had been called in to create the business structure of telephony, and to shape the general plan of its development. Since then he had done many other things. The one city of Buenos Ayres had paid him more, merely for giving it a system of trolleys and electric lights, than the United States had paid him for putting the telephone on a business basis. He was now rich and retired, free to enjoy his play-work of the farm and to forget the troubles of the city and the telephone But, as he stood among his barn-builders, there arrived from Boston and New York a delegation of telephone directors. Most of them belonged to the "Old Guard" of telephony. They had fought under Vail in the pioneer days; and now they had come to ask him to return to the telephone business, after twenty years of absence.

Vail laughed at the suggestion.

"Nonsense," he said, "I'm too old. I'm sixty-two years of age." The directors persisted.

They spoke of the approaching storm-cloud of panic and the need of another strong hand at the wheel until the crisis was over, but Vail still refused.

They spoke of old times and old memories, but he shook his head. "All my life," he said, "I have wanted to be a farmer."Then they drew a picture of the telephone situation. They showed him that the "grand telephonic system" which he had planned was unfinished. He was its architect, and it was undone.

The telephone business was energetic and prosperous. Under the brilliant leadership of Frederick P. Fish, it had grown by leaps and bounds. But it was still far from being the SYSTEM that Vail had dreamed of in his younger days; and so, when the directors put before him his unfinished plan, he surrendered. The instinct for completeness, which is one of the dominating characteristics of his mind, compelled him to consent. It was the call of the telephone.

Since that May morning, 1907, great things have been done by the men of the telephone and telegraph world. The Bell System was brought through the panic without a scratch. When the doubt and confusion were at their worst, Vail wrote an open letter to his stock-holders, in his practical, farmer-like way. He said:

"Our net earnings for the last ten months were $13,715,000, as against $11,579,000 for the same period in 1906. We have now in the banks over $18,000,000; and we will not need to borrow any money for two years."Soon afterwards, the work of consolidation began. Companies that overlapped were united.

Small local wire-clusters, several thousands of them, were linked to the national lines. A policy of publicity superseded the secrecy which had naturally grown to be a habit in the days of patent litigation. Visitors and reporters found an open door. Educational advertisements were published in the most popular magazines. The corps of inventors was spurred up to conquer the long-distance problems. And in return for a thirty million check, the control of the historic Western Union was transferred from the children of Jay Gould to the thirty thousand stock-holders of the American Telephone and Telegraph Company.

From what has been done, therefore, we may venture a guess as to the future of the telephone.

This "grand telephonic system" which had no existence thirty years ago, except in the imagination of Vail, seems to be at hand. The very newsboys in the streets are crying it. And while there is, of course, no exact blueprint of a best possible telephone system, we can now see the general outlines of Vail's plan.

There is nothing mysterious or ominous in this plan. It has nothing to do with the pools and conspiracies of Wall Street. No one will be squeezed out except the promoters of paper companies. The ****** fact is that Vail is organizing a complete Bell System for the same reason that he built one big comfortable barn for his Swiss cattle and his Welsh ponies, instead of half a dozen small uncomfortable sheds. He has never been a "high financier" to juggle profits out of other men's losses. He is merely applying to the telephone business the same hard sense that any farmer uses in the management of his farm. He is building a Big Barn, metaphorically, for the telephone and telegraph.

Plainly, the telephone system of the future will be national, so that any two people in the same country will be able to talk to one another.

It will not be competitive, for the reason that no farmer would think for a moment of running his farm on competitive lines. It will have a staff-and-line organization, to use a military phrase.

Each local company will continue to handle its own local affairs, and exercise to the full the basic virtue of self-help. But there will also be, as now, a central body of experts to handle the larger affairs that are common to all companies.

No separateness or secession on the one side, nor bureaucracy on the other--that is the typically American idea that underlies the ideal telephone system.

The line of authority, in such a system, will begin with the local manager. From him it will rise to the directors of the State company; then higher still to the directors of the national company;and finally, above all corporate leaders to the Federal Government itself. The failure of government ownership of the telephone in so many foreign countries does not mean that the private companies will have absolute power.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 千幻手机

    千幻手机

    千幻手机如同精灵一般喜人和跳跃,一首歌代表着一种心情,每一种心情都能让人不禁流泪,一本小说、一个故事、一部手机、一首歌,与你同览人生,一起畅游你的心路历程。
  • 武林梦之盈盈花盛处

    武林梦之盈盈花盛处

    盈盈花开:哇,你们四个竟然睡一起的!盛夏时光:不不不,我跟他们只是合租。天煞孤星、猴子捞月、刺猬滚滚:对,只是合租!!某天,盈盈到他们的合租房一看:骗子,你们仨明明睡一起!这是一个网游萌新变身游戏大神,顺便收获爱情的故事。本文1v1。
  • 鬼医世宠,邪妃傲世天下

    鬼医世宠,邪妃傲世天下

    重活一世,我莫夕颜必定不再为看任何人的脸色而活!她,左丞相府毫无地位的庶女三小姐,却因得到世间稀有奇宝五玲珑之一的‘龙珠’而修为大增,到头来她却被三皇子出卖,亲生父亲将她囚禁,龙珠也被自己的嫡长姐亲手自丹田挖出,不得全尸而亡。待她再次醒来却发现自己居然重生于阴谋即将开始的那一刻,而且龙珠也随她一起重生。君待吾以情,吾以情报之;君待吾以恨,吾以血敬之!
  • 星空万里我只属于你

    星空万里我只属于你

    女配逆袭系统,炮灰逆袭系统,女主系统,各种各样的,五花各门将原本平静的各大世界接得天翻地覆,哪怕神界搞出了拯救世界的系统,也是一个因果转回。所以凤红情与天签署了一份合约。聪明的凤红情直接从源头处理。但没想到第一个世界遇了血脉相连的蓝凤凰。为了省事。快速的交代后事,快速离去前往征服星辰大海,万里星河
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 拷贝大师

    拷贝大师

    灵气复苏,末世将至。人类开始拥有特殊的“天赋”。有人为“剑道”,有人为“火焰”。强大者为“雷电”“黑暗”。而柳枫的天赋是――拷贝。复制所有人的能力。
  • 纪实中国3

    纪实中国3

    “纪实中国丛书”将以关注生活,关注生存的现实笔触,展现来自于生活底层的真实故事,在一种亲切的阅读氛围里,引起阅读共鸣和读者并对自身生活的理性思考,达到以好作品影响人、引导人、改变人的目的。
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 爱已陈周

    爱已陈周

    分手的时候,冯陈双眼泛红,“你爱过我吗?”天道好轮回,苍天饶过谁。ps:文章所涉一切地名皆为虚构,如有雷同,纯属巧合。
  • 我正在说我爱你

    我正在说我爱你

    灵犀失恋失业,却在偶然的机会认识一个帅气男子并且缘分的作祟下一步步走向各自的人生。