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"I think engineering will supply our demand for a "spiritual" life after meat death."
- Bart Kosko

Telescribe  
  Creates a written record of distress signals and other reports.  

The almost damped-out cosmic surges swept through him rhythmically, gently urging him to sleep. But within an hour a buzzing called attention to the telescribe. The long expected flood of distress signals was beginning to come in. He got up wearily to listen.
Technovelgy from A Question of Salvage, by Malcolm Jameson.
Published by Astounding Science Fiction in 1939
Additional resources -

Compare to the vibrowriter from The Lost Language (1934) by David H. Keller, the speakwrite from 1984 (1948) by George Orwell, the transcriber from Second Foundation (1953) by Isaac Asimov and the electrosecretary from A Fall of Moondust (1961) by Arthur C. Clarke.

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Additional resources:
  More Ideas and Technology from A Question of Salvage
  More Ideas and Technology by Malcolm Jameson
  Tech news articles related to A Question of Salvage
  Tech news articles related to works by Malcolm Jameson

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