• JohnnyEnzyme@piefed.social
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    1 month ago

    Yo, PJ, could we get some context, or something?
    I’m just STARING at this sucker, whatever the hell it is.

    Alright, alright, so… the bands of cables going out to do their jobs, granted.

    Nah, I’m still confused… HELPPPP!!

  • Luccus@feddit.org
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    1 month ago

    People today like to make fun of the electricity scare of the 19th century:

    A Illustration by Judge, depicting a man caught dead within a dense net of wires on a electric street light. A skull faced spider with a light bulb for a body sits eerily next to the corpse. A dead horse is seen on the street, along with a fainting women, one men running and another man convulsively throwing his arms into the air as if he had just been struck by lightning.

    But I can’t really blame them. Most people today don’t know how electricity really works, and then imagine this shit looming over head; every day. Feels like Gordon Freeman watching the Citadel; powered only by T-Mobile…which is hardly an improvement over the Combine.

    • calliope@retrolemmy.com
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      1 month ago

      Apparently this cartoon was made a couple weeks after a specific electrical accident.

      First of all, I never caught that electricity is a spider.

      Note: Cover. Anti-electricity cartoon. Electricity is portrayed as a spider with a cobweb of electrical wires for trapping its human victims.

      On October 11, 1889 John Feeks, a Western Union lineman, was high up in the tangle of overhead electrical wires working on what were supposed to be low-voltage telegraph lines in a busy Manhattan district. As the lunchtime crowd below looked on he grabbed a nearby line that, unknown to him, had been shorted many blocks away with a high-voltage AC line. The jolt entered through his bare right hand and exited his left steel studded climbing boot. Feeks was killed almost instantly, his body falling into the tangle of wire, sparking, burning, and smoldering for the better part of an hour while a horrified crowd of thousands gathered below.

      Notes from Ohio State University library.

    • shalafi@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      I’m honestly surprised people didn’t come up with that long before electronic communication. And once they started, people started figuring ways to compress the transmitted data. And for a world full of magic, clacks didn’t take magic! Much like today, give a thousand autists keyboards and let them rock out.

      • ohulancutash@feddit.uk
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        1 month ago

        They did. But then railways arrived and electrical communication became possible and necessary.

      • Tar_Alcaran@sh.itjust.works
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        1 month ago

        I’m honestly surprised people didn’t come up with that long before electronic communication.

        Not so much the clacks, but flag semaphore towers were a thing long before the electric telegraph was invented. Infact, the term “Telegraph” predates the device we all think by several centuries.

        And there are some pretty awesome systems, like the Chappe telegraph which is about 50 years older than the electric telegraph and had hundreds of kilometers of line between french cities, venice and Amsterdam when people started building electric systems.

        The downside is that you need at least one operator per tower, every 10 or so kilometers, even if nobody lives there.