Motif éditions 1978 50 x 60. cm. Imprimé. De l’exposition The Obsessive Image 1960 - 1968 Institute of Contemporary Art
Reference : 136271
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Paris Librairie illustrée , Paul Ollendorff s. d. ( 1882 ou 1885 ? ) 1 vol. petit in-8 ( 18 x 12 cm )Fx.t., frontisp., t., VIII , 301 pp. 76 figures in ou hors-texte , toujours incluses dans la pagination . Frontispice correspondant à la fig. 76 . Plusieurs pl. gravées par Navellier et L. Marie . Avec Un mot de préface , et in fine , Table des matières . Cartonnage rouge . Dos lisse , titre doré . Plat supérieur et dos à décor noir et doré ; plat inférieur à encadrement noir . Cartonnage plus ou moins abîmé , quoique solide : coins et coupes émoussés . Le cartonnage a légèrement déteint sur les gardes qui sont salies . Intérieur convenable : rares rousseurs , manque un coin à une garde , petite déchirure ( 2 cm ) sans manque sur le titre . P. 297 ch. 267 .
Un des premiers ouvrages sur le téléphone ! Il est cité dans la Bibliothèque de la Société Générale des Téléphones ( première société privée qui exploita les réseaux français de 1879 à 1889 ) qui le date de 1882 , et dans la Bibliothèque historique des postes et des télécommunications [ a) Ouvrages techniques , côte 1 D00193 ] qui le date de 1885 . Louis FIGUIER ( Montpellier 1819 - Paris 1894 ) vulgarisateur scientifique . Médecin , professeur à l ' Ecole de Pharmacie de Montpellier puis de Paris , opposé à Claude Bernard , il abandonna l ' expérimentation . Il publia de nombreux mémoires scientifiques et devint un célèbre vulgarisateur . Ses articles furent réunis dans " L ' Année scientifique et industrielle " , inventaire des productions scientifiques de l' année , de 1856 à sa mort . " L ' Année scientifique 1877 " ( 21ème année , publiée en 1878 ) décrit l' invention de Graham Bell en 1876 , mais aussi le télectroscope : " Il serait possible d ' entendre à San Francisco un opéra représenté à Paris , et de voir en même temps les acteurs sur la scène et le public dans la salle . "
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New York, American Telephone and Telegraph Company, 1957. 8vo. Original full green cloth, bound with the original blue wrappers. Volume 36, 1957 of ""The Bell System Technical Journal"". Library stamp to pasted down front free end-paper. Minor bumping to extremities. A nice and clean copy. [Entire issue:] 20, 1513 pp.
First edition of the first technical description of the TAT-1, the first submarine transatlantic telephone cable system. The 2,240-mile cable was laid by the cableship Monarch and ran from Gallanach Bay, near Oban in Argyll, to Clarenville, Canada. The initial capacity was 36 calls at a time at a price per call of $12 for the first three minutes. Since trans-Atlantic service opened in 1927, calls had traveled across the ocean via radio waves. But cables provide much higher signal quality, avoid atmospheric interference and offer greater capacity and security.""The papers that follow describe the design, manufacture and installation of the first transatlantic telephone cable system with all its component parts, including the connection microwave radio-relay system in Nova Scotia."" (From the introduction to the present papers).""Years of development led up to 1956 when the first transatlantic telephone cable system started carrying calls"" this is an interesting story in itself. Two coaxial cables about 20 miles apart carried 36 two-way circuits. Nearly 50 sophisticated repeaters were spaced from 10 to 40 miles along the way. Each vacuum tube repeater contained 5,000 parts and cost almost $100,000."" (Petruzzellis, Thomas. Telephone Projects for the Evil Genius, 2008, p. 4). The electronic repeaters, the devices that held together the many separate cables, were designed by the Bell Telephone Laboratories. In terms of reliable operation, the most critical component of the system was the repeater. These devices, spaced at intervals of 37.5 nautical miles along the cable, compensated for loss. The repeaters were of a unique flexible design, which allowed them to be handled in the same manner as cable.TAT-1 carried the Moscow-Washington hotline between the American and Soviet heads of state.Other papers of interest contained in the present volume:1. Kelly, Dr. Mervin J." Radley, Sir Gordon. Transatlantic Communications - An Historical Resume. Pp. 1-5.2. Mottram, E.T. Halsey, R.J. Emling, J.W. Griffith, R.G. Transatlantic Telephone Cable System - Planning and Over-All Performance. Pp. 7-27.3. Lewis, H.A. Tucker, R.S. Lovell, G.H. Fraser, J. M. System Design for the North Atlantic Link. Pp. 29-68.4. Gleichmann, T.F. Lince, A.H. Wooley, M.C. Braga, F.J. Repeater Design for the North Atlantic Link. Pp. 69-101. 5. Lamb, H.A. Heffner, W.W. Repeater Production for the North Atlantic Link. Pp. 103-138. 6. Meszaros, G.W. Spencer, H.H. Power Feed Equipment for the North Atlantic Link. Pp. 139-162.7. McNally, J.O. Metson, G.H. Veazie, E.A. Holmes, M.F. Electron Tubes for the Transatlantic Cable System. Pp. 163-188.8. Lebert, A.W. Fischer, H.B. Biskeborn, M.C. Cable Design and Manufacture for the Transatlantic Submarine Cable System. Pp. 189-216.9. Halsey, R.J. Bampton, J.F. System Design for the Newfoundland-Nova Scotia Link. Pp. 217-244.10. Brockbank, R.A. Walker, D.C. Welsby, V.G. Repeater Design for the Newfoundland-Nova Scotia Link. Pp. 245-276.11. Thomas, J.F.P. Kelly, R. Power-Feed System for the Newfoundland-Nova Scotia Link. Pp. 277-292.12. Jack, J.S. Leech, Capt. W.H. Lewis, H.A. Route Selection and Cable Laying for the Transatlantic Cable System. Pp. 293-326.And many other.
New York, American Telephone and Telegraph Company, 1957. 8vo. Volume 36, 1957 of ""The Bell System Technical Journal"". In the original printed blue wrappers. Sunning to spine, and very minor spotting to wrappers. Internally near mint. 348 pp.
First edition of the first technical description of the TAT-1, the first submarine transatlantic telephone cable system. The 2,240-mile cable was laid by the cableship Monarch and ran from Gallanach Bay, near Oban in Argyll, to Clarenville, Canada.""The papers that follow describe the design, manufacture and installation of the first transatlantic telephone cable system with all its component parts, including the connection microwave radio-relay system in Nova Scotia."" (From the introduction to the present volume).""Years of development led up to 1956 when the first transatlantic telephone cable system started carrying calls"" this is an interesting story in itself. Two coaxial cables about 20 miles apart carried 36 two-way circuits. Nearly 50 sophisticated repeaters were spaced from 10 to 40 miles along the way. Each vacuum tube repeater contained 5,000 parts and cost almost $100,000."" (Petruzzellis, Thomas. Telephone Projects for the Evil Genius, 2008, p. 4). The electronic repeaters, the devices that held together the many separate cables, were designed by the Bell Telephone Laboratories. In terms of reliable operation, the most critical component of the system was the repeater. These devices, spaced at intervals of 37.5 nautical miles along the cable, compensated for loss. The repeaters were of a unique flexible design, which allowed them to be handled in the same manner as cable.TAT-1 carried the Moscow-Washington hotline between the American and Soviet heads of state.Other papers of interest contained in the present volume:1. Kelly, Dr. Mervin J." Radley, Sir Gordon. Transatlantic Communications - An Historical Resume. Pp. 1-5.2. Mottram, E.T. Halsey, R.J. Emling, J.W. Griffith, R.G. Transatlantic Telephone Cable System - Planning and Over-All Performance. Pp. 7-27.3. Lewis, H.A. Tucker, R.S. Lovell, G.H. Fraser, J. M. System Design for the North Atlantic Link. Pp. 29-68.4. Gleichmann, T.F. Lince, A.H. Wooley, M.C. Braga, F.J. Repeater Design for the North Atlantic Link. Pp. 69-101. 5. Lamb, H.A. Heffner, W.W. Repeater Production for the North Atlantic Link. Pp. 103-138. 6. Meszaros, G.W. Spencer, H.H. Power Feed Equipment for the North Atlantic Link. Pp. 139-162.7. McNally, J.O. Metson, G.H. Veazie, E.A. Holmes, M.F. Electron Tubes for the Transatlantic Cable System. Pp. 163-188.8. Lebert, A.W. Fischer, H.B. Biskeborn, M.C. Cable Design and Manufacture for the Transatlantic Submarine Cable System. Pp. 189-216.9. Halsey, R.J. Bampton, J.F. System Design for the Newfoundland-Nova Scotia Link. Pp. 217-244.10. Brockbank, R.A. Walker, D.C. Welsby, V.G. Repeater Design for the Newfoundland-Nova Scotia Link. Pp. 245-276.11. Thomas, J.F.P. Kelly, R. Power-Feed System for the Newfoundland-Nova Scotia Link. Pp. 277-292.12. Jack, J.S. Leech, Capt. W.H. Lewis, H.A. Route Selection and Cable Laying for the Transatlantic Cable System. Pp. 293-326.
Méry-sur-Seine : Revue des Arts et Traditions populaires de la Région Champagne-Ardenne / Société des Amateurs de Folklore et Arts Champenois (SAFAC), 1990. Revue 29,5x21cm, couverture couleur, 70 pages illustrées de documents en noir.
Le téléphone en ligne avec son temps / Le télégraphe optique Chappe / Le téléphone électrique Baudot / Le réseau, le central / Télécommunications hertziennes / Le centre de Bercenay-en-Othe / La Grève de 1909 / La femme et le téléphone / Mémoires et souvenirs / Télécom An 2000...
Libro-sciences SPRL. 1976. In-4. Broché. Etat d'usage, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 142 pages. Nombeuses gravures en noir et blanc, dans et hors texte. Annotation sur le premier contreplat.. . . . Classification Dewey : 621.382-Télécommunications
de la fée éléctricité au téléphone, l'invention du téléphone, l'idée de Bourseul, l'appareil réversible de Bell, l'essor du téléphone dans le monde.... Classification Dewey : 621.382-Télécommunications