The initial rate in 1866 for messages sent along the transatlantic cable was ten dollars a word, with a ten word minimum, meaning that a skilled workman of the day would have to set aside ten weeks’ salary in order to send a single message. As a practical matter, this limited cable use to governments (transmissions from the British and American governments had priority under the terms of their agreements with Field’s telegraph companies) and big businesses (who made up about 90 percent of telegraph traffic in the early years).

Businesses quickly turned to the use of commercial codes through which one word could convey an entire message. For example, the word “festival” as telegraphed by one fireworks manufacturer meant “a case of three mammoth torpedoes.” And for truly urgent information, price was considered no object: New York Tribune editor Horace Greeley spent $5,000 (over $65,000 in 2003 dollars) in 1870 to transmit one report about the Franco-Prussian War. During three months in 1867, the transatlantic cable sent 2,772 commercial messages, for a revenue that averaged $2,500 a day. But this represented just five percent of capacity, so the rate for sending a telegram was halved to $46.80 for ten words, a move which boosted daily revenue to $2,800.

  • Ertebolle@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Hah, if this happened nowadays you’d have to sign up for a $1000/month subscription for 100 words a month on a 5-year contract, pay a $35/word overage fee, and if you didn’t use all 100 words in a particular month, you could pay $5/word to roll over up to 10 of them to the next month. And if you try to cancel your subscription after those 5 years, they put you on hold for 3 hours and then accidentally hang up on you.

      • Ertebolle@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        Yes, and you can’t use your contracted word quota for that, and you have to send all of your personal information along with a prescribed seven-paragraph legal statement expressing your wish to cancel

    • over_clox@lemmy.world
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      Yeah, but you didn’t count for inflation…

      It would probably be more like $1,000,000 a month in today’s dollars.

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      Mate sounds like you need a better provider.

      I haven’t seen that shit since mobile Internet in 2010.

  • 200ok@lemmy.world
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    Inflation calculators only go back to 1913 and 1914, but $100 back then would work out to somewhere between $2,500-$3,500 now.

  • Moc@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Small change compared to what telecommunications carriers make these days

      • Moc@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Per unit costs are down, but revenue and most likely profits are up

        • DMmeYourNudes@lemmy.world
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          Sure, but the users cost is what really matters, and that’s down by many magnitudes. It’s fractions of a penny for me to send millions of words a second across the planet.

    • LanternEverywhere@kbin.social
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      In many ways yes, in many ways no. It’s hard to say where the balance lies, whether it’s better to be rich in the far past, or average income in the present. In terms of subjectively feeling happy I think it’s probably better to be rich in the past.

      • TexMexBazooka@lemm.ee
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        It’s always better to be rich I’d guess but I’d rather be middle income now with AC and internet acces than 100 years ago

        • LanternEverywhere@kbin.social
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          Oh if you’re talking about being the same income level at different time periods then it’s almost always better to be in the newer era.

          • dustyData@lemmy.world
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            People really be underestimating the value of cheap access to antibiotics. We only have had them for like a century, and it tripled average life expectancy and reduced global infant mortality to a tenth. No matter the income level, 100 years ago there would’ve been a fair chance one didn’t make it to puberty.

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      Some things have gotten better, but some have gotten worse. I’ve always thought that the analogy of older flagship phones fits this perfectly.

      Is your current budget android more common on the streets than a flagship from 4 years ago ever was? Yes. Does it have a comparable processor, and camera? Maybe. Is the build quality better? Hell no.

    • circuitfarmer@lemmy.sdf.org
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      In terms of availability of information and communication, definitely. In terms of cost of living and housing and its relation to average income, I’d wager not.

      • HumbertTetere@feddit.de
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        Hard to be better off than the rich of any era in such relative economic terms without being rich yourself.

    • Ertebolle@kbin.social
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      Average English word length is 4.7 characters, add spaces/punctuation and figure 6 total, so 1 MB = 174763 words = $1,746,730. Or around $23 million in 2023 dollars.

    • LanternEverywhere@kbin.social
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      What i wanna know is why they didn’t charge by character rather than word?

      You can squish words into a single clump and still have the individual words easily discernable. So what stopped people from simply removing all the blank spaces from a sentence and calling it a single word?

      If there was a maximum character count for what is considered a single word then you could still clump a few real words together into a single squished-together fake word, which would still save thousands of dollars.

      Or did the words have to be actual words found in the dictionary? If that was the case then were people not able to use words that weren’t in the dictionary, like a company’s invented codename for a project they were working on?

      • kakes@sh.itjust.works
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        I mean, it’s not like this was an automated process or anything. I’m sure people just used common sense.

      • ebits21@lemmy.ca
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        Probably wasn’t private. You likely needed a company telegraph operator to send the message.

        • Overzeetop@lemmy.world
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          TIL. Which is actually pretty bad considering I’m actually certified general amateur operator. They’ll let anyone with a little EE and law knowledge into the club these days.

          • collegefurtrader@discuss.tchncs.de
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            Good link. For the lazy:

            The neat thing about "PARIS " is that it’s a nice even 50 units long. It translates to “.–. .- .-. … …/” so there are:

            10 dits: 10 units; 4 dahs: 12 units; 9 intra-character spaces: 9 units; 4 inter-character spaces: 12 units; 1 word space: 7 units. A grand total of 50 units.