Editor | William Gafford |
---|---|
Categories | Trade magazine |
Frequency | Bi-monthly |
Circulation | 8,000 |
Publisher | AT&T Corporation - Long Line Division |
First issue | June 1944 |
Final issue | March 1952 |
Company | AT&T Corporation |
Country | United States |
Based in | New Jersey |
Language | English |
TWX was a trade magazine published by the Long Lines Department of AT&T Corporation. [1] The magazine first appeared in June 1944 and was published sporadically, ceasing publication in March 1952 after 41 issues. [2]
TWX magazine took its name from the Teletypewriter Exchange Service, which was developed by AT&T Corp. in 1931. [3] The TWX service was sold to Western Union in 1969, [4] but it remained an industry standard until 1981, when it was converted to the Telex II system.
Free subscriptions to TWX magazine were offered to companies that were using AT&T's equipment and services. As such, the content tended to focus less on the technical aspects of telegraph/Teletype operations and more on practical usage in an office environment. Each issue featured industry news, product evaluations, and testimonials from office managers extolling the virtues of the teletypewriter. [2] Although most of the articles were published without a byline, some of the magazine's content has been attributed to science-fiction writer William Tenn, who was working as a technical editor for AT&T's Bell Labs at the time. [5]
Although TWX magazine boasted a circulation of 8,000, most of that was due to its free circulation to AT&T's clients and partners. Few people actually read the magazine, and those that did accused it of being little more than "twenty pages of fluff and advertisements for products with a niche market at best". [2] Although the TWX system itself remained viable for several decades, TWX magazine shut down in March 1952.
Editor | William Gafford |
---|---|
Categories | Trade magazine |
Frequency | Bi-monthly |
Circulation | 8,000 |
Publisher | AT&T Corporation - Long Line Division |
First issue | June 1944 |
Final issue | March 1952 |
Company | AT&T Corporation |
Country | United States |
Based in | New Jersey |
Language | English |
TWX was a trade magazine published by the Long Lines Department of AT&T Corporation. [1] The magazine first appeared in June 1944 and was published sporadically, ceasing publication in March 1952 after 41 issues. [2]
TWX magazine took its name from the Teletypewriter Exchange Service, which was developed by AT&T Corp. in 1931. [3] The TWX service was sold to Western Union in 1969, [4] but it remained an industry standard until 1981, when it was converted to the Telex II system.
Free subscriptions to TWX magazine were offered to companies that were using AT&T's equipment and services. As such, the content tended to focus less on the technical aspects of telegraph/Teletype operations and more on practical usage in an office environment. Each issue featured industry news, product evaluations, and testimonials from office managers extolling the virtues of the teletypewriter. [2] Although most of the articles were published without a byline, some of the magazine's content has been attributed to science-fiction writer William Tenn, who was working as a technical editor for AT&T's Bell Labs at the time. [5]
Although TWX magazine boasted a circulation of 8,000, most of that was due to its free circulation to AT&T's clients and partners. Few people actually read the magazine, and those that did accused it of being little more than "twenty pages of fluff and advertisements for products with a niche market at best". [2] Although the TWX system itself remained viable for several decades, TWX magazine shut down in March 1952.