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Table of contents 1 Technical |
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history The Minitel is an online service accessible through the telephone lines. It was launched in France in 1/19/1982 by France Telecom. This mark also the development in France publish in the MICRODIGEST 1984. Since its early days, users could make online purchases, make train reservations, check stock prices, search the telephone directory, and chat in a similar way to that now made possible by the Internet. Millions of terminals were handed out free to telephone subscribers, funded by the government, resulting in a high penetration rate among businesses and the public. The use was sometimes pushed heavy-handedly: France Telecom would not give paper white pages to the owners of Minitel, since they were accessible for free on Minitel. France Telecom estimates that almost 9m terminals - including web-enabled PCs - had access to the network at the end of 1999, and that it was used by 25 million people (of a total population of 60 million). Payment methods: Credit card for purchases In the late 1990s, Minitel connections were stable at 100m a month plus 150m online directory inquiries, in spite of growing Internet use. In 1998, Minitel generated €832m832m ($824m) of revenues, of which €521m was channelled by France Telecom to service providers. Minitel sales in the late 1990s accounted for
almost 15% of sales at La Redoute and Les Trois Suisses, France's biggest
mail order companies. Minitel uses the telnet network protocol to access information on a remote server. Since telnet sessions are over an end-to-end telephone line connection, the security concerns present when using telenet over the Internet are not present. Minitel and
the Internet External Links |