Who still owns a typewriter?

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This was a fun thread about the ancient days of computering.


QUERY - who still owns a typewriter, whether you use it or not??!!??!!

I have an IBM Selectric (I think that's what it's called) high up on a closet shelf. Hasn't been used in years and years.
 
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We have an old one, Still use it occasionally. I had an IBM Selectric Type 1, a red one like Hunter Thompson used, that I used at work in the 80's. Loved that typewriter. I tried to buy years later when the company was closing its US operations, the guy over the surplus couldn't find it. Somebody knew what it was and took it.
 
At work we have 3-4, use it to write multipart checks, fill out Bill of Lading and international shipping documents.
Much better than trying to fill out the fillable PDF documents.

Yea, could write a program and buy (or create) forms but the "bought and paid for, still works" is a powerful argument.
 
This was a fun thread about the ancient days of computering.


QUERY - who still owns a typewriter, whether you use it or not??!!??!!

I have an IBM Selectric (I think that's what it's called) high up on a closet shelf. Hasn't been used in years and years.
Don't have one, but thinking about getting a non-electric one.
I am 69 years old and played with and seriously used a couple when I was a teenager.
I hear they are becoming somewhat popular once again, primarily with the younger Yuppies as interesting older technology.
 
In the closet at my inlaws empty house, I think it's a selectric and there are at least a dozen different balls (fonts?) and many boxes of ribbons and carbon paper. MIL had been a secretary at the pentagon decades ago and I think this was all provided because she did some remote transcription work…then one day it was worthless.
 
As late as ~2010 we had an IBM Selectric sitting around in the corner of our substation. It was usually good for a laugh when a new, young Deputy would ask, "what's that thing?" :ROFLMAO:
 
Ours must've been sold in a garage sale. Probably brought a penny.

At one time, we had an old manual (not electric) which had all black keys, i.e., no symbols on them. It taught me where the keys were on a QWERTY keyboard.
 
Had one in College, typed many papers late at night:eek:

Recent thread on them.

 
Why? I was using my computer as a word processor long before the internet existed.
I did too. I still own my desktop from the early 90s. But let's say the grid also includes electricity going down. As I recall there were a lot of manual typewriters out there that did not require a plug to operate. And they were portable, making them the original laptop, lol.
 

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