Viewdata is a Videotex implementation. It is a type of information retrieval service in which a subscriber can access a remote database via a common carrier channel, request data and receive requested data on a video display over a separate channel. Samuel Fedida, who had the idea for Viewdata in 1968, was credited as inventor of the system which was developed while working for the British Post Office which was the operator of the national telephone system. The first prototype became operational in 1974. The access, request and reception are usually via common carrier broadcast channels. This is in contrast with teletext.
Developer | Samuel Fedida, Post Office |
---|---|
Type | Videotex |
Launch date | 1974 |
Platform(s) | Viewdata |
Technology
editViewdata offered a display of 40×24 characters, based on ISO 646 (IRV IA5) – 7 bits with no accented characters.[1] Originally, Viewdata was accessed with a special purpose terminal (or emulation software) and a modem running at ITU-T V.23 speed (1,200 bit/s down, 75 bit/s up).[1] By 2004, it was normally accessed over TCP/IP using Viewdata client software on a personal computer running Microsoft Windows, or using a Web-based emulator.
Travel industry
editAs of 2015, Viewdata was still in use in the United Kingdom, mainly by the travel industry. Travel agents use it to look up the price and availability of package holidays and flights. Once they find what the customer is looking for they can place a booking.
There are a number of factors still holding up a move to a Web-based standard. Viewdata is regarded within the industry as low-cost and reliable, travel consultants have been trained to use Viewdata and would need training to book holidays on the Internet, and tour operators cannot agree on a Web-based standard. [citation needed]
Bulletin board systems
editIt was made in the late 1970s and early 1980s to make it easier for travel consultants to check availability and make bookings for holidays. A number of Viewdata bulletin board systems existed in the 1980s, predominantly in the UK due to the proliferation of the BBC Micro, and a short-lived Viewdata Revival appeared in the late 1990s fuelled by the retrocomputing vogue. Some Viewdata boards still exist, with accessibility in the form of Java Telnet clients.
Keypad symbols: the sextile and the square
edit⌗ ⚹ | |
---|---|
Viewdata keypad symbols | |
In Unicode | U+26B9 ⚹ SEXTILE U+2317 ⌗ VIEWDATA SQUARE |
Different from | |
Different from | U+002A * ASTERISK (*, *) U+0023 # NUMBER SIGN (#) |
Viewdata uses special symbols already widely available on telephone keypads: the ⚹ "star" key and the ⌗ "square" key, as formally standardised by the International Telecommunication Union.[2] These are often treated as approximately corresponding to the ASCII asterisk (*) and number sign (#), which do not necessarily conform to the ITU specifications for the keypad symbols; the asterisk is also usually displayed smaller and raised.[3]
These symbols appear as 'Sextile' and 'Viewdata square' in the Miscellaneous Symbols and Miscellaneous Technical Unicode blocks, respectively. The sextile was added due to its use in astrology,[3] and the square had previously appeared in the BS_Viewdata character set, as a replacement for the underscore.[4]
In 2013, the German national body submitted a Unicode Technical Committee proposal to align the Unicode reference glyphs with the ITU specifications for these symbols, and annotate them as telephone keypad symbols on the code charts.[3] As of 2019[update] (Unicode 12.1), these changes have not been accepted/implemented.[5]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b "Proceedings of the Videotex in Europe" (PDF). 1979-07-19. Retrieved 2023-12-26.
- ^ "E.161 : Arrangement of digits, letters and symbols on telephones and other devices that can be used for gaining access to a telephone network". International Telecommunication Union. 2 February 2001. Retrieved 23 December 2019.
- ^ a b c Karl Pentzlin (28 October 2013). "Proposal to incorporate two telephony symbols into Unicode by glyph and annotation changes" (PDF). UTC L2/13-105R. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2022-10-09. Retrieved 23 December 2019.
- ^ BSI (1981-06-01). Alphanumerics for viewdata and broadcast teletext (PDF). ITSCJ/IPSJ. ISO-IR-47.
- ^ Unicode Consortium. "Miscellaneous Technical" (PDF). The Unicode Standard. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2022-10-09.
- This article incorporates public domain material from Federal Standard 1037C. General Services Administration. Archived from the original on 2022-01-22.
External links
edit- Definition at The Institute for Telecommunication Sciences
- Examples of existing Viewdata boards:
- NXtel (a free server, page manager and client implementation, and a public hosted service).
- Telstar Videotex Service
- Ringworld (running on the original software and hardware from the time of its original incarnation, accessed via java client)
- The Dwarfen Realm (running emulated through the web)
- Celebrating the Viewdata Revolution Including several Prestel Brochures
- vd-view A Viewtex web client for TeeFax, Telstar, CCl4 and NXTel
- vidtex An ncurses/terminal client for TeeFax, Telstar, CCl4, NXTel and others