[The Age of Invention by Holland Thompson]@TWC D-Link book
The Age of Invention

CHAPTER IX
17/34

"After the vote recorder," he says, "I invented a stock ticker, and started a ticker service in Boston; had thirty or forty subscribers and operated from a room over the Gold Exchange." This machine Edison attempted to sell in New York, but he returned to Boston without having succeeded.

He then invented a duplex telegraph by which two messages might be sent simultaneously, but at a test the machine failed because of the stupidity of the assistant.
Penniless and in debt, Edison arrived again in New York in 1869.

But now fortune favored him.

The Gold Indicator Company was a concern furnishing to its subscribers by telegraph the Stock Exchange prices of gold.

The company's instrument was out of order.


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