thumb|right|300px|A Viewdata machine displayed in [[teletext format]]

Viewdata is a Videotex implementation. It is a type of information retrieval service in which a subscriber can access a remote database via a common carrier channel, request data and receive requested data on a video display over a separate channel. Samuel Fedida, who had the idea for Viewdata in 1968, was credited as inventor of the system which was developed while working for the British Post Office which was the operator of the national telephone system. The first prototype became operational in 1974. The access, request and reception are usually via common carrier broadcast channels. This is in contrast with teletext.

Design

Viewdata offered a display of 40×24 characters, based on ISO 646 (IRV IA5) – 7 bits with no accented characters.

Originally, Viewdata was accessed with a special purpose terminal (or emulation software) and a modem running at ITU-T V.23 speed (1,200 bit/s down, 75 bit/s up). The ASCII asterisk (*) and number sign (#) are sometimes used instead because they are regular symbols on computer keyboards, although they do not match the ITU specification. and the square had previously appeared in the BS_Viewdata character set, as a replacement for the underscore.

In 2013, the German national body submitted a Unicode Technical Committee proposal to align the Unicode reference glyphs with the ITU specifications for these symbols, and annotate them as telephone keypad symbols on the code charts.

Uses

Travel industry

As of 2015, Viewdata was still in use in the United Kingdom, mainly by the travel industry. Travel agents use it to look up the price and availability of package holidays and flights. Once they find what the customer is looking for they can place a booking. As of 2019, Viewdata is only used by a handful of travel agents.

Bulletin board systems

A number of Viewdata bulletin board systems existed in the 1980s, predominantly in the UK due to the proliferation of the BBC Micro, and a short-lived Viewdata Revival appeared in the late 1990s fuelled by the retrocomputing vogue. Some Viewdata boards still exist, with accessibility in the form of Java Telnet clients.

See also

  • Prestel

References

  • Definition at The Institute for Telecommunication Sciences
  • Celebrating the Viewdata Revolution Including several Prestel Brochures
  • vd-view A Viewtex web client for TeeFax, Telstar, CCl4 and NXTel
  • vidtex An ncurses/terminal client for TeeFax, Telstar, CCl4, NXTel and others