Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Pain In Sides Hips While Sleeping

CW - Faster SMS


Faster SMS
and among the characters introduced snail


In the final 's Morse has Christian roots. Linked, on the one hand, the U.S. religiosity and, secondly, to associations: that is one of the adhesives between the experience of faith and society. We start from the beginning.

The history of code overlaps with that of the telegraph that the American Samuel Morse patented at the turn of the thirties and forties of the nineteenth century. The first telegraph line that sees the light is between Baltimore and Washington. On May 24, 1844 message is sent debut. It is a Bible verse taken from the book of Numbers chapter 23: "What God has made." Then, when the binary language of the artist-inventor becomes the backbone of the first international communication with the "wireless telegraph" Guglielmo Marconi, will make his real breakthrough, the Morse code becomes more popular. Not only among professionals but also among children.

letters converted to points and lines like the Scouts, the movement founded in 1907 by Robert Baden-Powell. "I learned the Morse character map - 65, says the Californian Dennis Franklin, a member of ' International Morse Preservation Society - when I was a Boy Scout. I use it for almost half a century and I've perfected by amateur radio. " Of course, dialogue with lights or sounds intermittently in AGESCI output is a sort of dip in the past for children and adolescents grew up with the phone or at the computer.

And who said that Morse is synonymous with communications in slow motion? In Australia, in July 2005 under the auspices of the Powerhouse Museum in Sydn y combining science and design, have challenged a ninety retired telegrapher Gordon Hill, a thirteen year old lover sms, Brittany Devlin. Objective: To ascertain who was the quickest to send a text. Well, the veteran of broadcasting has had by far the best by beating the boy "expert" in text messages. Moreover, it still continues to play with Morse.

Just watch the World Championship races high-speed telegraphy (HST, which stands for High Speed \u200b\u200bTelegraphy), which since 1995 has been held every two years around the globe. The last edition was held in 2009 in Obzor, Bulgaria. There are four tests: two transmitting and two receiving. In the test of receiving the letters in Morse sent increasingly higher speeds until the competitor is able to understand them. In the review of transmission is written as many characters and figures in a minute without making mistakes. And the champions? Not only are their fifties or sixties. In the tournament there are 16 or under categories reserved for those with between 17 and 21 years. Because - you have to admit - the Morse brings together the generations.

of Gambassi James (Published Future , insert Agora, September 12, 2010)

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