tor 2016-04-21 klockan 10:06 +0200 skrev Nico de Jong: > ----- Oprindelig meddelelse ----- > Fra: "Swift Griggs" <swiftgri...@gmail.com> > Til: "General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts" > <cctalk@classiccmp.org> > Sendt: 20. april 2016 18:55 > Emne: Re: strangest systems I've sent email from > > > > On Wed, 20 Apr 2016, Pontus Pihlgren wrote: > >> For remote mailing I prefer i vt terminal and a microwave link: > >> https://youtu.be/r6NuDcemRsM > > > > For the danish cold-war museum, I'm presently setting up a telex system with > (at present) 3 or 4 Siemens T100 teleprinters (it can support up to 16). > Apart from functioning as a 60's/70's telex exchange, it can send and > receive e-mails, and therefore we can in principle update e.g. our facebook > status. > The e-mail recipients are defined as a number on the exchange, and then this > number is connected to a table, where the e-mail address is defined. > When receiving, the e-mail is to be sent to the museum at the address > (example) te...@museum.dk. In the commentline,the text must be ZCZC > <telexnumber> > Works like a dream. An identical system is installed at the danish it museum > (www.ddhf.dk) > Theres is of course a limit : characters only, but special characters can be > translated on the fly
That reminds about the gateway between MILTEX (Swedish military telex-network) , the procedure to send a message from one teleprinter to an telefax terminal was the same (i have forgotten what the address was.)