The Phone Company was a volunteer network providing a free email-to-fax service.
It was one of the few grandfathered users of the '.int' domain. The website's address was tpc.int. The address is no longer reachable. Archives in the Wayback Machine document this lost site of the early Internet.
Dating from 1993, it is historically notable for being one of the earliest examples of how a community on the internet disrupted the heavily regulated long distance telephone network. In 1993, fax machines were still relatively new technology, driving an increase in demand for long distance (both foreign and domestic). As background, using the newer technology of e-mail to send the sort of documents and correspondence that fax machines typically transmitted through the internet was cheaper, faster, and higher quality. The community was organized to integrate the new technology of e-mail transmission through the internet with old technology of audio transmissions by fax machines. The community arose at a time when it was often thought that the internet would soon free every single person in the world to communicate freely with each other. It was organized to help facilitate that communication freely between people by:
1) maintaining instructions for using the network to send documents
2) keeping indexes (databases) of telephone numbers and email addresses that could receive the document
3) stating the share social mores of the community (these are often known as standards of etiquette or codes of conduct)
It takes its name from the similarly named organisation in the film The President's Analyst.
This service became available since 1993, although it has been off-line in recent years.
See also
- Fax server
- Internet fax
- Internet Printing Protocol
References
External links
- TPC home page as of 2006, on archive.org
- TPC home page as of 2011 (latest version before going off-line), on archive.org