[governance] FW: <nettime> Adieu Minitel, Adieu!

michael gurstein gurstein at gmail.com
Sun Jul 1 06:32:01 EDT 2012


-----Original Message-----
From: nettime-l-bounces at mail.kein.org
[mailto:nettime-l-bounces at mail.kein.org] On Behalf Of Patrice Riemens
Sent: Saturday, June 30, 2012 5:45 PM
To: nettime-l at kein.org
Subject: <nettime> Adieu Minitel, Adieu!

Today is the last day in service of France's "bogus brother of the Internet"
(Le Monde), that strange square box called the Minitel, launched in
1981/1982.

The Minitel has been object of much derision once Internet use became
(relatively) widespread outside of France, yet it did antedate the 'public
Internet' by at least 15 years, and, contrary to a commonly held belief, the
Minitel did not at all hamper the diffusion of the Internet in France after
it had really taken of (say, by the second half of the nineties).

The Minitel had a number of drawbacks, the most important for users being
the lack of graphic interface (and thus it spawned much ingenuity in 'ascii
art'), but it had a lot of advantages for service providers, as connection
was charged and nearly every content priced (between FF 0,02 and FF 1,41
/minute) and directly billed to the user's phone subscription, with the
takings neatly shared between the (state) phone authority and the providers,
enabling the former to offer the whole appliance for free and still make a
robust profit in the process.

Another funny feature of the Minitel (and the one that made it so
profitable) was its accidental extension into the realm of (text-based)
pornography and sexual dating, known in French as "la messagerie rose" (the
pink messaging service) - that's how grandpa (or his grandchild) raked those
hefty telephone bills, not by checking out the SNCF timetable (the state
railways - still rather pricey at FF 0,34/minute).

On the technical side, the Minitel was the losing pawn in the end in the
'system battle' between the centralised Transpac/X.25 network and the
distributed TCP/IP based Internet (whose basic feature, packet switching, is
claimed by the French to be rather Louis Pouzin's than Vint Cerf's invention
;-) Transpac also goes this evening, together with the Minitel.

Last but not least, the Minitel did make the large swathes of the French
population IT-savvy, or at least IT acquainted, ten years ahead of the rest
of the world. It's penetration (in 'la France profonde', deep France) was
astonishing, and has only recently been matched by Internet connectivity,
since it went together with the telephone, but a no extra connection of
subscription cost (phone customers were offered the option between the paper
directory or a Minitel box).

And as today's Le Monde article points out, the Minitel was the last of
France's technological 'Grands Projets'. So let's salute this evening this
swansong of the 'Colbertist State'.


Le Monde article's is here: http://bit.ly/MuG57t
"Le Minitel, "faux frhre" d'Internet, ferme difinitivement"
see also:  http://on.msnbc.com/Lc9LBR
"Minitel online terminals recycled after three decades of use in France"




!DSPAM:2676,4fef9ec225671424839028!


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