登陆注册
38544000000057

第57章 CHAPTER IX THE FUTURE OF THE TELEPHONE(3)

This universal trend toward consolidation has introduced a variety of problems that will engage the ablest brains in the telephone world for many years to come. How to get the benefits of organization without its losses, to become strong without losing quickness, to become systematic without losing the dash and dare of earlier days, to develop the working force into an army of high-speed specialists without losing the bird's-eye view of the whole situation,--these are the riddles of the new type, for which the telephonists of the next generation must find the answers. They illustrate the nature of the big jobs that the telephone has to offer to an ambitious and gifted young man of to-day.

"The problems never were as large or as complex as they are right now," says J. J. Carty, the chief of the telephone engineers. The eternal struggle remains between the large and little ideas--between the men who see what might be and the men who only see what IS. There is still the race to break records. Already the girl at the switchboard can find the person wanted in thirty seconds. This is one-tenth of the time that was taken in the early centrals; but it is still too long. It is one-half of a valuable minute.

It must be cut to twenty-five seconds, or twenty or fifteen.

There is still the inventors' battle to gain miles. The distance over which conversations can be held has been increased from twenty miles to twenty-five hundred. But this is not far enough. There are some civilized human beings who are twelve thousand miles apart, and who have interests in common. During the Boxer Rebellion in China, for instance, there were Americans in Peking who would gladly have given half of their fortune for the use of a pair of wires to New York.

In the earliest days of the telephone, Bell was fond of prophesying that "the time will come when we will talk across the Atlantic Ocean";but this was regarded as a poetical fancy until Pupin invented his method of automatically propelling the electric current. Since then the most conservative engineer will discuss the problem of transatlantic telephony. And as for the poets, they are now dreaming of the time when a man may speak and hear his own voice come back to him around the world.

The immediate long-distance problem is, of course, to talk from New York to the Pacific.

The two oceans are now only three and a half days apart by rail. Seattle is clamoring for a wire to the East. San Diego wants one in time for her Panama Canal Exposition in 1915.

The wires are already strung to San Francisco, but cannot be used in the present stage of the art.

And Vail's captains are working now with almost breathless haste to give him a birthday present of a talk across the continent from his farm in Vermont.

"I can see a universal system of telephony for the United States in the very near future," says Carty. "There is a statue of Seward standing in one of the streets of Seattle. The inscription upon it is, `To a United Country.' But as an Easterner stands there, he feels the isolation of that Far Western State, and he will always feel it, until he can talk from one side of the United States to the other. For my part," con-tinues Carty, "I believe we will talk across continents and across oceans. Why not? Are there not more cells in one human body than there are people in the whole earth?"Some future Carty may solve the abandoned problem of the single wire, and cut the copper bill in two by restoring the grounded circuit.

He may transmit vision as well as speech. He may perfect a third-rail system for use on moving trains. He may conceive of an ideal insulating material to supersede glass, mica, paper, and enamel. He may establish a universal code, so that all persons of importance in the United States shall have call-numbers by which they may instantly be located, as books are in a library.

Some other young man may create a commercial department on wide lines, a work which telephone men have as yet been too specialized to do. Whoever does this will be a man of comprehensive brain. He will be as closely in touch with the average man as with the art of telephony.

He will know the gossip of the street, the demands of the labor unions, and the policies of governors and presidents. The psy-chology of the Western farmer will concern him, and the tone of the daily press, and the methods of department stores. It will be his aim to know the subtle chemistry of public opinion, and to adapt the telephone service to the shifting moods and necessities of the times. HE WILL FITTELEPHONY LIKE A GARMENT AROUND THE HABITS OF THEPEOPLE.

Also, now that the telephone business has become strong, its next anxiety must be to develop the virtues, and not the defects, of strength.

Its motto must be "Ich dien"--I serve; and it will be the work of the future statesmen of the telephone to illustrate this motto in all its practical variations. They will cater and explain, and explain and cater. They will educate and educate, until they have created an expert public.

They will teach by pictures and lectures and exhibitions. They will have charts and diagrams hung in the telephone booths, so that the person who is waiting for a call may learn a little and pass the time more pleasantly. They will, in a word, attend to those innumerable trifles that make the perfection of public service.

Already the Bell System has gone far in this direction by organizing what might fairly be called a foresight department. Here is where the fortune-tellers of the business sit.

When new lines or exchanges are to be built, these men study the situation with an eye to the future. They prepare a "fundamental plan," outlining what may reasonably be expected to happen in fifteen or twenty years.

Invariably they are optimists. They make provision for growth, but none at all for shrinkage.

同类推荐
  • 学仙辨真诀

    学仙辨真诀

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 慧上菩萨问大善权经卷

    慧上菩萨问大善权经卷

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 水镜录

    水镜录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • Smoke Bellew

    Smoke Bellew

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • English Stories Germany

    English Stories Germany

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 气场力:提升女人身价的50个秘密

    气场力:提升女人身价的50个秘密

    气场是什么,如何打造自己的气场,那些气场十足的女人是天生的吗?种种问题在《气场力:提升女人身价的50个秘密》一书,一一为读者揭示。《气场力:提升女人身价的50个秘密》列举实例,分层讲述,不仅仅要教会女性朋友如何打造气场,同时也教会大家如何运用气场,让自己成为人群中最耀眼的那一个。
  • 新幽兰传说

    新幽兰传说

    幽兰传说,主要讲述了颜盈与懒懒的颠簸爱情故事……
  • 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!
  • 超级巨鲲分身

    超级巨鲲分身

    基地市前,异界大军兵临城下,地球武者誓死坚守!忽然,一只巨兽,带着变异兽大军踏空而来。那是一只鲲,身长十万米,高两万米,浑身布满钢铁鳞片,长相狰狞恐怖。鲲张嘴,瞬间吞掉异界军队,然后带着变异兽大军杀向异界!没人知道,这巨鲲,竟是一个地球人的分身!……鲲分身能力:吞噬进化:小鱼-大鱼-变异兽-海洋巨兽-异族-星空战舰-行星-恒星-星系-宇宙!无物不吞!能力共享:鲲分身获得能力,本体同步获得相应能力!伤害转移:本体受到任何伤害,都瞬间转移到鲲分身身上!
  • 与我无关的青春恋爱物语

    与我无关的青春恋爱物语

    (仅作者向《春物》致敬。)青春是什么?我有过吗?啊,是那灰色的记忆吗。不,不仅是灰色,我的青春不仅仅是灰色!那耀眼的夕阳下的微笑绝对不是灰色的!那个人绝对不是灰色的!!这是被救者的我的故事
  • 永天途

    永天途

    无名小卒邢云背负着绝天之命,继承着龙族希望,踏上永天之界。
  • 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!
  • 小媳妇快到锅里来

    小媳妇快到锅里来

    风停了,云知道,爱来了,谁知道。当无心男遇上无心女,他们的婚姻又是怎样一番情景。面对早已“死亡”的妻子正在为一群如狼似虎(饿的)男人亲自做饭时,某男开始不淡定了。“是谁允许你给除了你老公以外的男人做饭的,好一枝红杏出墙来……”正要往锅里放盐的某女十分好奇,明明是某人不安本分搞婚外情,自己离家出走第二天就被扣上车祸死亡的标签,这只疯狗怎么还有脸来质问她,她到很想找人问问谁把这只疯狗放出来的??手中的盐不禁多抖了两下,齁死你!(本文纯属虚构,请勿模仿。)
  • 星云修真志

    星云修真志

    星辰漫天有蓝鼎,云端踏剑履仙途,修身养性煅异能,真灵幻化药香浓,网罗天地三妙印,游戏三界意随心,绝处鸿运险化夷,品味人生此中尽。——风神之魄
  • 美人思华年

    美人思华年

    容貌尽毁,德行皆丧,被家族驱逐出京,途中又遇车夫谋财害命,将她杀死于路途,灵魂出窍,眼看着自己的身子一日日腐败,终明白再美的躯壳不过是画骨画皮。可再醒来时,她又变回了纪四姑娘,一切不好的事情,还都没有发生,一步步剖析发现她居然还有另外一个身份……