Directory
References

Teletypesetter

device
Also known as: TTS

Learn about this topic in these articles:

automatic composition

  • A modern printing press that uses UV technology
    In printing: Automatic composition (perforated tape)

    The Teletypesetter (TTS) system extends to slugcasting machines the principle of separation of function originally characteristic of the Monotype: it enables Linotype or Intertype machines to be controlled by a perforated tape produced on a separate keyboard, even situated in a different city, since the combination…

    Read More

history of printing

  • A modern printing press that uses UV technology
    In printing: Automation of composition (after 1929)

    The perfection of teletypesetter remote-control composing equipment in the United States by about 1929 permitted widespread application of the principle of separation of human function on the one hand and mechanized function on the other. The operator produces a tape on which each letter, symbol, and space is…

    Read More

newspaper publishing

  • Gutenberg Bible
    In history of publishing: Technological developments

    …when Walter Morey developed the Teletypesetter (first demonstrated in 1928). This machine was an improvement on the telegraph, which was widely used by reporters in the field and by the wire services, such as Reuters and Associated Press, to send news items in draft form to editorial offices miles away.…

    Read More

computerized typesetting, method of typesetting in which characters are generated by computer and transferred to light-sensitive paper or film by means of either pulses from a laser beam or moving rays of light from a stroboscopic source or a cathode-ray tube (CRT). The system includes a keyboard that produces magnetic tape—or, formerly, punched paper—for input, a computer for making hyphenation and other end-of-line and page-makeup decisions, and a typesetting unit for output. The keyboard may be a counting keyboard, which allows the operator to decide placement and spacing and is suitable for tables, formulas, and equations, or a noncounting keyboard, which is faster and cheaper to operate and suitable for solid text.

The computer must be programmed carefully for optimal word spacing and correct hyphenation. Older typesetters have a photounit with an optical type font carried as a negative image or image master. It may be a grid, disk, drum, or film strip. Light flashed through the characters projects them through a lens onto light-sensitive paper or film. The optical systems are supplanted in newer equipment by laser beams that form the various parts of each character in response to computer-generated electric pulses.

Some systems have a video display terminal (VDT), consisting of a keyboard and a CRT viewing screen, that enables the operator to see and correct the words as they are being typed. If a system has a line printer, it can produce printouts of “hard copy.”

An optical character recognition (OCR) system “reads” typed copy and records the characters on a machine-readable tape. It converts the tape into electronic signals that enter the recognition unit and are converted into copy without an operator at the keyboard.

Photocomposition is perhaps the most important innovation in typesetting since the development of movable type; it and other forms of computerized typesetting eliminate metal casting and produce a page that is virtually indistinguishable from one produced by metal type. Its main advantage is speed. A linecasting machine produces 5 characters per second; an early phototypesetting system can set between 30 and 100. A fully computerized typesetter with sophisticated electronics can set up to 10,000 characters per second, the actual speed being limited by the speed of the film transport mechanism. See also photocomposition.