Caselli's autographic telegraph transmitted facsimiles, drawings and handwriting. The dispatch was written with insulating ink on tin foil scanned by a stylus. At the reception point, a needle moved across paper coated with a chemical solution ; the electric current produced a chemical reaction revealing the sent message. Two regulating chronometers between the transmission and the reception stations synchronised by electromagnets drove the styluses' movement. The price of a transmission was set at a prohibitive 20 centimes per square centimetre and just two lines were installed; the device was unsuccessful and the system abandoned. "Nowadays," one of the inventor's obituaries said, "the only place you can find Caselli's telegraph is in museums, where it serves as a memorable example of the fate that befalls ingenious inventions when they do not meet a real need." There is no way he could have known that the Pantelegraph was the fax machine's forerunner.
Interested in Natural history?
Get updates with your personalized Culture Weekly
You are all set!
Your first Culture Weekly will arrive this week.