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Telephone and TTYs
For decades, telephones were a
technology and a convenience that separated deaf people from the rest
of society. On the job, for example, many deaf people were denied
promotions when positions required the use of a phone.
In 1964, Robert Weitbrecht, a deaf
electronic scientist, developed an acoustic coupler that converted
sounds into text. Signals received by a standard telephone handset
placed on a coupler were translated into a printed text message by the
teletype machine. A flashing light alerted the deaf person receiving a
call that the phone was ringing. Access to this telecommunications
device, also called a "TTY" or "TDD," meant deaf people could place a
phone call to a friend, a club, or anyone who also had a TTY. Before
TTYs, deaf people had to go in person to see if friends were home, make
appointments, or do any of the things hearing people did effortlessly
by phone. For deaf people, TTYs became a tool for change.
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Large teletypewriters eventually
were replaced by smaller, more portable models, most with lines of text
on a screen along with the printed version.
National Airlines
News Bureau, 1979.
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Typing shortcuts such as "GA" for
"go ahead" or "it's your turn," help to speed up the TTY conversation.
Another shortcut "SK," adopted from train operators, means "send kill"
and ends a conversation.
Gallaudet University Archives
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