So Wikipedia is wrong, since it claims that it was introduced in 1958 for ASCII and 110 Baud.
Then again, 101/103 modem modulation doesn't care about speed (it isn't clocked) up to a limit of 300 baud or so. I wonder if there is also terminology here: what we now call a "modem" was earlier called a "tuning unit" and that term goes back to 5 bit machines and the 1950s. It may be more a radio TTY term than a landline term, but the concept is identical. I remember QST articles around 1958 or so about RTTY tuning units, built out of tubes with a relay (differential relay?) thrown in for good measure. paul > On May 9, 2017, at 10:32 AM, Pete Lancashire <p...@petelancashire.com> wrote: > > The C version came later with the introduction of ASCII ( 5 to 8 bits ) and > 110 baud. So it does not go back to the 50's. > > I do not know when the C version was released. The ASCII Teletype Model 35 > was introduced in 1961. > > -pete > > > > > On Tue, May 9, 2017 at 6:47 AM, Paul Koning <paulkon...@comcast.net> wrote: > > > On May 8, 2017, at 10:27 PM, Pete Lancashire via cctalk > > <cctalk@classiccmp.org> wrote: > > > > Bell 101C > > > > https://goo.gl/photos/hrhAwvzMBLWWteXu6 > > > > https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bell_101 > > Interesting. Released in 1958 but that unit is stamped 10 years later. > > It would be nice to see photos of the circuit boards. And I sure wonder what > those rows of large relays are for. > > paul > > > >