As we can imagine, the discovery of
electricity was as momentous as the invention of the wheel and electricity
alone expanded, yet refined, protocol into a more technical term. In the
opening pages in chapter 5, Gleick explains the creation of the telegraph and
how the responsibilities for which are relatively low since, at least in this
instance, the clerks in the Ferry House of Jersey city only managed one “end”
of a pair of wires leading from Baltimore to Washington D.C. Around the same
time, the Electric Telegraph Company installed an electric clock in their
rented Founders’ Hall building, where they referred to its inner workings
similar to the workings (or protocols) of the brain. The current definition of
protocol is as follows: a protocol is a method for
accomplishing something. In practice, protocols typically refer to a standard
form of conduct or etiquette: or simply, a set of specific rules. The purpose
of these rules is to ensure the effective communication between parties without
conflict or misinterpretation.
Another
historical example that embodies the definition of protocol is the railroad
system, even though it was only briefly mentioned in the section on chapter
5. Here we have a huge system that
survived entirely on protocol because the logistics of the train system must
adhere to strict rules of timing and communication or the system will crash,
literally. Looking closer, the railroad system behaved fundamentally similar to
how email works. You have information, or cargo, being sent to and from
locations and each location must communicate based on time, language, and
destination.
Gleick
describes trials the Chappe brothers went through to establish the first
instance of the telegraph, before it went electric. Their process of building
towers, using line of sight, and synchronizing pendulum clocks all went into
the process of creating the first telegraph. The way it would work was the
towers had to be connected through sight and sound so that the “sender” and
“receiver” would be able to document the timing on the pendulum clock of when
the signal was sent and received. Even though this system eventually failed, it
can be considered a form of protocol since there were rules to accomplish
communication.
Ever since protocol has been introduced it was governed the way we do things. Like you said, the railroads were possible because of this. If there wasn't a protocol to organize and assimilate every process that needed to happen in order to make the trains work with each other, it would have been a disaster. The protocol was of course developed as they went along because they had to start somewhere which is true for most beginnings.
ReplyDeleteProtocol today is what makes society function. In the government there are rules and guidelines that must be met and followed in order. If we didn't have protocols in place, bills could be passed without any of their reviews and waiting periods. Elections would be based on whoever worked their way into the office chair that was behind the desk and the title.