馃敆 Telefon H铆rmond贸: Listen to news and music electronically, in 1893

馃敆 Telecommunications 馃敆 Hungary 馃敆 Journalism 馃敆 Project-independent assessment

The Telefon H铆rmond贸 (also Telefonh铆rmond贸, generally translated as "Telephone Herald") was a "telephone newspaper" located in Budapest, Hungary, which, beginning in 1893, provided news and entertainment to subscribers over telephone lines. It was both the first and the longest surviving telephone newspaper system, although from 1 December 1925 until its termination in 1944 it was primarily used to retransmit programmes broadcast by Magyar R谩di贸.

Three decades before the development of radio broadcasting, the Telefon H铆rmond贸 was the first service to electronically deliver a wide range of spoken and musical programming to a diverse audience. Although its inventor envisioned that the technology could be eventually expanded to serve a national or international audience, the technical limitations of the time ultimately limited its service area to just the city of Budapest.

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