The invention and development of telephone exchanges were approaching a limit, set by the relay, until electronic devices made a new limit possible. The thermionic valve introduced electronics into telephone speech-transmission systems in the first quarter of the twentieth century, and into data-transmission systems shortly after. Some use was made of copper-oxide rectifiers as switches, but little or none of the valve until the 1930s when operations too fast for relays were required for research apparatus. The breakthrough to large-scale electronic switching and data processing machines was made during the Second World War and was followed after the war by the development of computers, telephone exchanges and other data-processing systems, aided by the rapid development of devices and notably of the transistor and its derivatives. Despite the effort put into electronic telephone systems, their penetration into the networks of the world is relatively slight owing to difficulties of economics and of application to existing networks, a situation which semiconductor large-scale integrated circuits are expected to resolve.