Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
They used the 5 bit baudot code and generally worked at 60 words per minute.
Escape sequences date back at least to the 1874 Baudot code.
Users were not satisfied with the limited character set available in Baudot code.
Mechanical teleprinters using 5-bit codes (see Baudot code) typically used a stop period of 1.5 bit times.
Early teleprinter systems used five data bits, typically with some variant of the Baudot code.
A companion Model 32 used the more established five-level Baudot code.
Baudot code may include a figure space.
As early as 1901 Baudot code contained separate carriage return and line feed characters.
"So I converted each letter into a number between one and thirty-two, using the Baudot code.
Most teleprinters used the 5-bit Baudot code (also known as ITA2).
But such a binary encoding - 5 bits - is what occurs in Baudot code for telegraphic purposes.
The album's cover art is a combination of colours and blocks, which is a representation of the Baudot code.
Tutte did this with the original teleprinter 5-bit Baudot codes, which led him to his initial breakthrough of recognising a 41 character repetition.
The teleprinters of the day emitted each character as five parallel bits on five lines, typically encoded in the Baudot code or something similar.
Telex machines first performed rotary-telephone-style pulse dialling for circuit switching, and then sent data by Baudot code.
This theme is also reflective of the random, incomprehensible pattern on the album's cover (until you "fix" it using the Baudot Code).
The Baudot code which is used for encoding has two special characters that allow to switch between two halves of a code.
Early teletypewriters used the ITA-1 Baudot code, a five-bit code.
The table above "shows the allocation of the Baudot code which was employed in the British Post Office for continental and inland services.
A form of control characters were introduced in the 1870 Baudot code: NUL and DEL.
To reduce hardware cost, teleprinter manufacturers adopted the fixed-length 5 bit Baudot code (rather than trying to use variable-length Morse code).
RTTY uses the ITA2 (Baudot code) character code.
The original (or "Baudot") radioteletype system is based almost invariably on the Baudot code or ITA-2 5 bit alphabet.
The unit is named after Jean-Maurice-Émile Baudot a French telecommunications engineer who innvented the Baudot code.
The Baudot code was used asynchronously with start and stop bits: the asynchronous code design was intimately linked with the start-stop electro-mechanical design of teleprinters.