Videotex (or "interactive videotex") was one of the earliest implementations of an "end-user information system". From the late 1970s to mid-1980s, it was used to deliver information (usually pages of text) to a user in computer-like format, typically to be displayed on a television. Television ( TV) is a widely used Telecommunication medium for sending ( Broadcasting) and receiving moving Images, either monochromatic
Videotex in its broader definition can be used to refer to any such service, including the Internet, bulletin board systems, online service providers, and even the arrival/departure displays at an airport. The Internet is a global system of interconnected Computer networks A Bulletin Board System, or BBS, is a Computer system running software that allows users to connect and login to An online service provider is inclusive to Internet service providers and Web sites such as Wikipedia 's or Usenet (commonly accessed through In a more limited definition, it refers only to two-way information services, as opposed to one-way services such as teletext. Teletext (or "broadcast Teletext" is a Television information retrieval service developed in the United Kingdom in the early However, unlike the modern Internet, all traditional videotex services were highly centralized.
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The first attempt at a general-purpose videotex service were created in the United Kingdom in the late 1960s. The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, commonly known as the United Kingdom, the UK or Britain,is a Sovereign state located In about 1970 the BBC had a brainstorming session in which it was decided to start researching ways to send closed captioning information to audience. Closed captioning is a term describing several systems developed to display text on a Television or Video screen to provide additional or interpretive As the Teledata research continued the BBC became interested in using the system for delivering any sort of information, not just closed captioning. In 1972, the concept was first made public under the new name Ceefax. Ceefax (phonetic for "See Facts" is the BBC 's Teletext information service Meanwhile the General Post Office (soon to become British Telecom) had been researching a similar concept since the late 1960s, known as Viewdata. The General Post Office (GPO was officially established in England in 1660 by Charles II and it eventually grew to combine the functions of both the state BT Group plc (formerly British Telecommunications plc) which trades as BT (ˌbiːˈtiː bee tee) (previously known as British Telecom and still Viewdata is a Videotex implementation It is a type of Information retrieval service in which a Subscriber can Access a remote Database Unlike Ceefax which was a one-way service carried in the existing TV signal, Viewdata was a two-way system using telephones. Since the Post Office owned the telephones, this was considered to be an excellent way to drive more customers to use the phones. Not to be outdone by the BBC, they also announced their service, under the name Prestel. Prestel (abbrev from press telephone) the brand name for the UK Post Office 's Viewdata technology was an interactive Videotex system developed ITV soon joined the fray with a Ceefax-clone known as ORACLE. ORACLE (from "Optional Reception of Announcements by Coded Line Electronics" was a commercial Teletext service first broadcast on ITV in 1974
In 1974 all the services agreed a standard for displaying the information. The display would be a simple 40x24 grid of text, with some "graphics characters" for constructing simple graphics. This standard was called CEPT1. CEPT1 was a standard set in 1981 by the European Conference of Postal and Telecommunications Administrations (CEPT for the display of Videotex. The standard did not define the delivery system, so both Viewdata-like and Teledata-like services could at least share the TV-side hardware (which at that point in time was quite expensive). The standard also introduced a new term that covered all such services, teletext. Teletext (or "broadcast Teletext" is a Television information retrieval service developed in the United Kingdom in the early Ceefax first started operation in 1977 with a limited 30 pages, followed quickly by ORACLE and then Prestel in 1979.
Prestel was somewhat popular for a time, but never gained anywhere near the popularity of Ceefax. This was due primarily to its delivering much the same content, yet requiring the user to pay for the terminal (today referred to as a set-top box), a monthly charge, and phone bills on top of that (unlike the US, local calls are paid for in most of Europe). A set-top box (STB or set-top unit (STU is a device that connects to a Television and an external source of signal, turning the signal into Although Prestel's two-way features (including e-mail) were interesting, the end-users appeared to be unwilling to pay much for such a service, not as much as it cost to run it at least. In the late 1980s the system was re-focused as a provider of financial data, and eventually bought out by the Financial Times in 1994. It continues today in name only, as FT's information service. A closed access videotex system based on the Prestel model was developed by the travel industry, and continues to be almost universally used by travel agents throughout the country.
Using a prototype domestic television equipped with the Prestel chip set, Michael Aldrich of Redifon Computers Ltd demonstrated real-time transaction processing in 1979 and thus invented teleshopping or online shopping as it is now named. From 1980 onwards he designed, sold and installed systems with major UK companies including the world's first travel industry system,the world's first vehicle locator system for one of the world's largest auto manufacturers and the world's first supermarket system. He wrote a book, Videotex - Key to the Wired City (Quiller Press 1982) about his ideas and systems which among other topics explored a future of teleshopping and teleworking that has proven to be prophetic. Before the IBM PC, Microsoft and the Internet, he invented and manufactured and sold the 'Teleputer', a PC that could receive TV programmes and communicate using its Prestel chip set.
The Teleputer was a range of computers that were suffixed with a number. Only the Teleputer 1 and Teleputer 3 were manufactured and sold. The teleputer 1 was a very simple device and only worked as a teletex terminal, whereas the Teleputer 3 was a z80 based micro computer. It ran with a pair of single sided 5 1/4 inch floppy disk drive; a 20Mb Hard disk drive version was available towards the end of the product's life. The operating system was CP/M or a proprietary variant CP*, and the unit was supplied with a suite of applications, consisting of a word processor, spreadsheet, database and a semi-compiled basic programming language. The display supplied with the unit (both the Teleputer 1 and 3) was a modified Rediffusion 14 inch portable colour television, with the tuner circuitry removed and being driven by a RGB input. The unit had a 64Kb onboard memory which could be expanded to 128Kb with a plug in card. Graphics were the standard videotext (or teletext) resolution and colour, but a high resolution graphic card was also available. A 75/1200 baud modem was fitted as standard (could also run at 300/300 and 1200/1200), and connected to the telephone via an old style round telephone connector. In addition a IEEE interface card could be fitted. On the back of the unit there was a RS232 and Centronic connections and on the front was the connector for the keyboard.
The proposed Teleputer 4 & 5 were planned to have a laser disk attached and would allow the units to control video output on a separate screen.
Interest in the UK trials did not go unnoticed in North America. In Canada the Department of Communications started a lengthy development program in the late 1970s that led to a "second generation" service known as Telidon. Country to "Dominion of Canada" or "Canadian Federation" or anything else please read the Talk Page NAPLPS ( N orth A merican P resentation L evel P rotocol S yntax is a Graphics language for use originally with Telidon was able to deliver service using the vertical blanking interval of a TV signal or completely by telephone using a Bell 202 style (split baud rate 150/1200) modem. The TV signal was used in a similar fashion to Ceefax, but used more of the available signal (due to differences in the signals between North America and Europe) for a data rate about 1200-bit/s. Some TV signal systems used a low-speed modem on the phone line for menu operation. The resulting system was rolled out in several test studies, all of which were failures.
The use of the 202 model, rather than the Datapac-ready Bell 212 created severe limitations, as it made use of the Nation-wide x-25 packet network essentially out-of-bounds for Telidon-based services. There were also many widely held misperceptions concerning the graphics resolution and colour resolution that slowed business acceptance. Byte magazine once described it as "low resolution", when the coding system was, in fact, capable of 2^24 resolution in 8-byte mode. There was also a pronounced emphasis in government and Telco circles on "hardware decoding" even after very capable PC-based software decoders became readily available. This emphasis on special single-purpose hardware was yet another impediment to the widespread adoption of the system.
Amongst the first services were The Source and CompuServe, both begun in 1979. The Source (Source Telecomputing Corporation was an early Online service, one of the first such services to be oriented toward and available to the general public CompuServe, ( CompuServe Information Service, also known by its acronym CIS) was the first major commercial Online service in the United States Year 1979 ( MCMLXXIX) was a Common year starting on Monday (link displays the 1979 Gregorian calendar) One of the earliest experiments with marketing videotex to consumers in the U.S. was by Radio Shack, which sold a consumer videotex terminal, essentially a single-purpose predecessor to the TRS-80 Color Computer, in outlets across the country. The United States of America —commonly referred to as the RadioShack Corporation (formerly Tandy Corporation) (  is a chain of electronics retail stores in the United States, as well as parts of North America The Radio Shack TRS-80 Color Computer (also called Tandy Color Computer, or CoCo) was a Home computer launched in 1980 Sales were anemic. Radio Shack later sold a videotex software and hardware package for the Color Computer.
In an attempt to capitalize on the European experience, a number of US-based media firms started their own videotex systems in the early 1980s. Among them were Knight-Ridder, the Los Angeles Times, and Field Enterprises in Chicago, which launched Keyfax. The Fort Worth Star-Telegram partnered with Radio Shack to launch StarText. This article is about the Fort Worth electronic magazine. For other meanings see Startext (disambiguation. (Radio Shack is headquartered in Fort Worth). RadioShack Corporation (formerly Tandy Corporation) (  is a chain of electronics retail stores in the United States, as well as parts of North America
Unlike the UK, however, the FCC refused to set a single technical standard, so each provider could choose what it wished. Some selected Telidon (now standardized as NAPLPS) but the majority decided to use slight-modified versions of the Prestel hardware. NAPLPS ( N orth A merican P resentation L evel P rotocol S yntax is a Graphics language for use originally with StarText used proprietary software developed at the Star-Telegram. Rolled out across the country from 1982 to 1984, all of the services quickly died and none, except StarText, remained after another two years. StarText remained in operation until the late 1990s, when it was moved to the web.
The primary problem was that the systems were simply too slow, operating on 300 baud modems connected to large minicomputers. A minicomputer (colloquially mini) is a class of multi-user Computers that lies in the middle range of the computing spectrum in between the largest Multi-user After waiting several seconds for the data to be sent, users then had to scroll up and down to view the articles. Searching and indexing was not provided, so users often had to download long lists of titles before they could download the article itself. Furthermore, most of the same information was available in easy-to-use TV format on the air, or in general reference books at the local library, and didn't tie up your phone line. Unlike the Ceefax system where the signal was available for free in every TV, many U. S. systems cost hundreds of dollars to install, plus monthly fees of $30 or more.
NAPLPS-based services were also being developed by several other joint partnerships between 1983 and 1987. This includes:
One of the early videotex providers, Trintex, a joint venture of AT&T-CBS completed a moderately successful trial of videotex use in the homes of Ridgewood, New Jersey. Viewtron was an early online service offered by Knight-Ridder and AT&T. Trintex was merged with another joint venture that added Citibank to the AT&T-CBS partnership. Shortly later Sears bought into the partnership that in circa 1985 began to offer a service called Prodigy, which used NAPLPS to send information to its users, right up until it turned into an Internet service provider in the late 1990s. This article refers to the now defunct Prodigy Communications Corporation that was purchased by SBC Communications Inc Because of its relatively late debut, Prodigy was able to skip the intermediate step of persuading American consumers to attach proprietary boxes to their televisions; it was among the earliest proponents of computer-based videotex.
NAPLPS-based systems (Teleguide) were also used for an interactive Mall directory system in various locations including, the Worlds largest indoor mall, West Edmonton Mall (1985) and the Toronto Eaton Center. It was also used for an interactive multipoint audio-graphic educational teleconferencing system (1987) that predated todays shared interactive whiteboard systems such as those used by Blackboard and Desire2Learn.
With the French Minitel system, unlike any other service, the users were given an entire custom designed terminal for free. The Minitel is a Videotex Online service accessible through the Telephone lines and is considered one of the world's most successful pre- World A computer terminal is an electronic or electromechanical hardware device that is used for entering data into and displaying data from a Computer or a Computing This was a deliberate move on the part of France Telecom, which reasoned that it would be cheaper in the long run to give away free terminals and teach its customers how to look up telephone listings on the terminal, instead of continuing to print and ship millions of phone books each year.
Once the network was in place, commercial services started to sprout up, becoming very popular in the mid-1980s. By 1990 tens of millions of terminals were in use. Like Prestel, Minitel used an asymmetric modem (1200-bit/s for downloading information to the terminal and 75-bit/s back).
Bell Canada introduced Minitel to Quebec as Alex in 1988, and Ontario two years later. Alex was the name of an interactive Videotex information service offered by Bell Canada in market research from 1988 to 1990 and thence to the general public until Bell Canada, commonly shortened to "Bell" is a major Canadian Telecommunications company Alex was the name of an interactive Videotex information service offered by Bell Canada in market research from 1988 to 1990 and thence to the general public until It was available both as a standalone CRT terminal (very similar in design to Apple's eMac) with 1200-bit/s modem, and as software-only for MS DOS computers. The eMac, short for education Mac, was a Macintosh desktop computer made by Apple Inc The system was received enthusiastically thanks to a free two-month introductory period, but fizzled within two years. Online fees were very high, and the useful services such as home banking, restaurant reservations, and news feeds, that Bell Canada advertised did not materialise; within a very short time the majority of content on Alex was of poor quality or very expensive chat lines. Bell Canada, commonly shortened to "Bell" is a major Canadian Telecommunications company The Alex terminals did double duty for connecting to text-only BBSes. A Bulletin Board System, or BBS, is a Computer system running software that allows users to connect and login to
A very successful system was started in São Paulo, Brazil, by then state-owned Telesp (Telecomunicações de São Paulo). São Paulo ( is the largest city in Brazil, with its metropolitan area ranking among the largest urban areas in the world |utc_offset = -2 to -4 |time_zone_DST = BRST |utc_offset_DST = -2 to -5 |cctld Telesp - Telecomunicações de São Paulo SA ( was a Telecommunications company in São Paulo state, Brazil. It operated from 1982 to the mid-nineties; a few other state telephone companies followed Telesp's lead, but each state kept standalone databases and services. The key to its success was that the phone company offered only the service and phone subscriber databases and third parties - banks, database providers, newspapers - offered additional content and services. The system peaked at 70 thousand subscribers around 1995.
The Germans took the CEPT1 concept and expanded it so it was somewhat more flexible, the resulting standard was called CEPT2.
In Germany, the system was named BTX (Bildschirmtext [Engl: "screen text"]). Bildschirmtext ( German "screen text" abbrev Btx) was a V
After that the French went one step further and developed CEPT3 that would be used for their popular Minitel system.
None of the CEPT standards used high resolution graphics. The European Conference of Postal and Telecommunications Administrations (CEPT was established on June 26, 1959 as a coordinating body for European state
Some people confuse videotex with the Internet. Although early videotex providers in the 1970s encountered many issues similar to those faced by Internet service providers 20 years later, it is important to emphasize that the two technologies evolved separately and reflect fundamentally different assumptions about how to computerize communications.
The Internet in its mature form (after 1990) is highly decentralized in that it is essentially a federation of thousands of service providers whose mutual cooperation makes everything run, more or less. Furthermore, the various hardware and software components of the Internet are designed, manufactured and supported by thousands of different companies. Thus, completing any given task on the Internet, such as retrieving a webpage, relies on the contributions of hundreds of people at a hundred or more distinct companies, each of which may have only very tenuous connections with each other.
In contrast, videotex was always highly centralized (except in the French Minitel service, also including thousands of information providers running their own servers connected to the packet switched network "TRANSPAC"). Even in videotex networks where third-party companies could post their own content and operate special services like forums, a single company usually owned and operated the underlying communications network, developed and deployed the necessary hardware and software, and billed both content providers and users for access. The exception was the transaction processing videotex system developed in the UK by Michael Aldrich(1980) which brought teleshopping into prominence and was the idea developed later through the Internet. Aldrich's systems were based on minicomputers that could communicate with multiple mainframes. Many systems were installed in the UK including the world's first supermarket teleshopping system. Nearly all books and articles (in English) from videotex's heyday (the late 1970s and early 1980s) seem to reflect a common assumption that in any given videotex system, there would be a single company that would build and operate the network. Although this appears shortsighted in retrospect, it is important to realize that communications had been perceived as a natural monopoly for almost a century — indeed, in much of the world, telephone networks were then and still are explicitly operated as a government monopoly. Natural monopoly is a term used in Economics to refer to two different things The Internet as we know it today was still in its infancy in the 1970s, and was mainly operated on telephone lines owned by AT&T which were leased by ARPA. Before proposing a merge request please see Talk and see if the merger you propose has recently been made and The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA is an agency of the United States Department of Defense responsible for the development of new Technology At the time, AT&T did not take seriously the threat posed by packet switching; it actually turned down the opportunity to take over ARPANET. Packet switching is a network communications method that splits data traffic (digital representations of text sound or video data into chunks called packets, that are then The ARPANET ( Advanced Research Projects Agency Network) developed by ARPA of the United States Department of Defense, was the world's first operational Other computer networks at the time were not really decentralized; for example, the private network Tymnet had central control computers called supervisors which controlled each other in an automatically determined hierarchy. Tymnet was an international data communications network headquartered in San Jose, California that utilized virtual call packet switched technology and used X It would take another decade of hard work to transform the Internet from an academic toy into the basis for a modern information utility.
Definitions of Videotex and associated terms [1] These definitions were written in 1980 so some names may be out of date.
2. Videotex-Key to the Wired City' Michael Aldrich Quiller Press 1982