登陆注册
5364000000057

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
  • 孙明复小集

    孙明复小集

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 秋池

    秋池

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • Stories Of The Supernatural

    Stories Of The Supernatural

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 张忠敏公遗集

    张忠敏公遗集

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 瞿文懿公制科集

    瞿文懿公制科集

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 王妃如此多娇

    王妃如此多娇

    前世,苏锦音救了位皇子,并被皇子追着以身相许。皇子成了太子后,恩情就成了催命符。重生归来,她不想再做东郭先生和救蛇的农夫。苏姑娘,重金相报如何?苏姑娘,助你扬名如何?苏姑娘,要不以身相许?我们还是谈谈钱吧。
  • 温故(之一)

    温故(之一)

    人类始终生活在历史的投影里。这投影,既非上帝的恩赐,也不是什么神做的手脚,而是源自人类将自己与动物区分开来的那个重要特征——记忆。历史的投影有过远有近,远的如原始祖先迈向文明渺然足迹,所的如昨天刚刚发生的事情。时间之流,不舍昼夜,不仅把已经发生的,而且终将把正在发生的以及行将发生的一切,都裹挟而去,统统融入历史的投影。最早意识到这投影价值的,不是别人,正是我们的至圣先师孔夫子,他老人家一句“温故而知新”,虽平白如话,却如醍醐灌顶。历史既是人类活动的归宿,更是面向未来的智慧之源。谈到历史与现实的关系,英国作家奥威尔的表述则更加直截了当,他说:谁掌握了历史,谁就掌握了现在。
  • 霸爱100分:男神,放肆宠

    霸爱100分:男神,放肆宠

    她身怀异能,总能看到一些奇怪的东西,被周围的人排挤。他是神秘组织的头领,身边无数人环绕,却只宠她一人。全世界都传她脸皮之厚,抱上某人的粗大腿。
  • 哈佛家训精华读本:献给孩子的人生礼物

    哈佛家训精华读本:献给孩子的人生礼物

    《哈佛家训精华读本:献给孩子的人生礼物》是一份献给孩子的人生礼物,是促进孩子们成长、成才的精神食粮。它借助一个个生动有趣的故事,向孩子们阐述了百年哈佛的人生哲学,告诉孩子们许许多多做人与处世的哲理,从而启迪孩子们的人生智慧,激励孩子们奋发上进。
  • 云升日落

    云升日落

    邹婧珊一直以来的想法就是嫁给“煜哥哥”,混吃等死。但是被拒绝的邹婧珊她掉进悬崖了,从那以后她改变了,她记起了些什么,她要努力要奋斗,不再堕落。终于在不懈的努力后,她放弃了渣男,遇到了真正爱的他。可是他消失了,被替代了,被推进了万劫不复的地方。然而,在她前进,努力,奋斗的途中,那个消失的人却霸气回来了。但是本来君子如玉的他怎么霸气也只是表面。他还是他,不曾变过,只是不再平凡。
  • 异界之魔武大帝

    异界之魔武大帝

    一个武技横行,魔法飘飞的世界,一次倒霉的机会,被车撞倒的林枫,穿越来到了这样一个充满传奇色彩的,战气和魔法并行的世界,附身到一个刚刚身死的将军之子上。看林枫如何凭借着妖孽般的头脑,过人的战气,魔法天赋,纵横于天地间,面临即将支离破碎的将军世家,他将如何将其带往巅峰。
  • 唱道真言

    唱道真言

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 冷帝的小宠妃

    冷帝的小宠妃

    这真是一失足成千古恨...不!是一穿越已成他人妻。俞歆然在梦里看到的身着一袭嫁衣逃跑的女子居然和自己长得一样?!她为什么要逃婚?难道自己的穿越和她有关?政通人和的大离国、镇国将军府的宝贝千金、国泰民安的社会气象……终于可以一朝穿越重做人了。如此好的人物背景设定,自己叫俞歆然还是叶芷又有何关系?只是没成想,一觉醒来发现自己居然已经结婚了?!!作为一个有夫之妇,我的美好理想和鸿鹄之志、我的江湖梦、创业梦、美男梦……全都是白!日!做!梦!不行,绝对不能就此向命运屈服。“我一定要休夫!”……
  • Myths and Legends of the Sioux

    Myths and Legends of the Sioux

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 武则天四大奇案

    武则天四大奇案

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。