[CW] CW Still Being Used in Phils.
David Ring
n1ea at arrl.net
Thu Dec 31 23:04:06 EST 2009
Inquirer Headlines / Nation
http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/inquirerheadlines/nation/view/20091223-243547/Morse-Code-still-dashing-through-the-Cordillera
Morse Code still dashing through the Cordillera
By Desiree Caluza
Inquirer Northern Luzon
Posted date: December 23, 2009
BAGUIO CITY—There is no mountain high enough to block a Christmas greeting
because highland communities that have no mobile telephone signals can still
be reached by Morse Code.
In this day and age, the Commission on Information and Communication
Technology (CICT) in the Cordillera Administrative Region is still operating
a telegraph system that serves clients here.
Nothing beats the old technology, according to telegraph operators working
at the Baguio City Post Office, never mind that each word transmitted costs
a customer P2.40. (Mobile or landline telephone calls cost P10 a minute.)
Customers who use the telegraph to send Christmas greetings use “broken
English” to shorten their messages, rather like today’s text messages,
according to samples obtained by the Philippine Daily Inquirer.
*Still profiting*
Remarkably, the Baguio telegraph station still earns P3,000 a month, said
Aurea Bilag, acting chief operator at the CICT.
Bilag said the station’s profits used to reach P10,000 a month—until almost
every resident in the Cordillera acquired a mobile telephone.
But the highlands are not always hospitable to Internet satellite or
cellular phone signals, so the CICT continues to maintain 80 telegraph
stations in Benguet, Ifugao, Abra and Kalinga, said CICT operator Helen
Damasco.
The telegraph machines were purchased way back in the 1960s but the
government has kept them working, Damasco said.
To facilitate communication among these towns when mobile telephones are
inaccessible, local officials reach each other by Morse Code using these
machines, she said.
According to Damasco, the machines are also active during typhoons, when
more sophisticated facilities fail to operate.
*‘CW’ machines*
This Christmas, the telegraph office offers straight holiday message
packages.
“Our Christmas telegrams are categorized [as] social telegrams,” Damasco
said. She said they used to send out telegram cards as their special
Christmas message package, except that these had been phased out.
“Our visitors from Manila would see our [old technology] and they would
laugh. And then they’d ask, ‘You still use CW (continuous wave) machines?’”
she said.
Continuous wave is the most common medium for transmitting messages to
telegraph stations by Morse Code—a sonic alphabet composed of dots (shorts)
and dashes (longs).
The code was named after its inventor, American artist Samuel Morse, who
developed the first successful electric telegraph in 1838.
The telegraph offices in the mining town of Itogon in Benguet province still
use a World War II telegraph model called the “straight key,” which is known
in the United States as J-38.
*Morse Code courses*
Damasco, a telegraph operator for the past 39 years, said the telegram began
to descend into obscurity in the 1990s because of the mobile phones and the
Internet.
But vocational schools continue to keep Morse Code courses alive because the
demand for the telegram has not disappeared completely, she said.
“Other operators learn Morse Code from the Internet” or by enrolling in the
Telecommunication Training Institution in Valenzuela City in Metro Manila,
Damasco said.
Christmas card sales are also brisk, indicating that the postal service
remains busy during the Yuletide season. A Baguio bookstore has sold 200
cards daily in the run-up to Christmas Day.
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