My parents bought me a typewriter after I learned to type, in eighth grade. That was 62 years ago, and I still have that typewriter, and it still works.
I learned on a manual and took a typewriter to college. But my kids are grown and married already, and even I left college with a desktop computer, so I wonder how old this guy was when he started having kids. (By the way, I still have my mom’s old manual typewriter that she took to college in the 50s).
a heard they outlawed mimeograph because the elementary kids where getting high sniffing it. They said it was a gateway drug to sniffing glue in art class
A bit earlier there were the typewriters that let you change fonts. The IBM Selectric, inspired perhaps by the invention of the golf ball, was the most famous. But one of my grandfathers had one back in the 19-teens that had cylinders of type that you could change, sort of like a later ASR-33 teletype, that he and my grandmother could use for typing mathematics papers including different alphabets.
Sadly, I’m old enough to know what a mimeograph machine is. Learned how to use one in high school when I was taking a business machines class, which was right after my stenoghraphy class. (I swear I graduated in the 20th Century, 1975 to be exact. LOL!!)
Passing on knowledge: When at Basic and AIT in the military they always ask for volunteers for stuff and usually the thing you believed you had volunteered for wasn’t even close to what they called it – with one exception. If they asked, “Can anyone type?!” at formation it turns out it wasn’t a trick; that volunteer would be sent to the Company HQ or Battalion HQ and pretty much stayed there typing and drinking coffee etc. Yes, I learned this too late. Anyone thinking of or young enough to joinup, keep this in mind!
My typewriter has the distinction of having been a calendar pin-up. It’s a portable purchased by my Dad in the mid-60s, and I used it to type high school and college papers in the 70s. In 2014, I found one a calendar that featured typewriters (the selection was based on various design aspects and overall popularity). Well, my Dad’s typewriter was this calendar’s Miss December, so of course I had to buy it — not to mention that I like typewriters.
I still have it, though I haven’t used it in something over three decades. For any typewriter aficionados out there, it’s a Hermes 3000.
Ratkin Premium Member about 1 year ago
At least it’s electric. I learned on a manual. “A S D F …”
Qiset about 1 year ago
Tell him it’s more efficient. It goes directly from the keyboard to the printer.
Zykoic about 1 year ago
Carbon copies.
Devils Knight about 1 year ago
ahh mimeograph just hearing that and i can smell it
phritzg Premium Member about 1 year ago
My parents bought me a typewriter after I learned to type, in eighth grade. That was 62 years ago, and I still have that typewriter, and it still works.
gibberish 101 about 1 year ago
After that I’ll explain the card puncher to use for the computer.
Doug K about 1 year ago
The “screen” was in my head. I was like part of it – a human-computer-printer combination.
cdward about 1 year ago
I learned on a manual and took a typewriter to college. But my kids are grown and married already, and even I left college with a desktop computer, so I wonder how old this guy was when he started having kids. (By the way, I still have my mom’s old manual typewriter that she took to college in the 50s).
Totalloser Premium Member about 1 year ago
a heard they outlawed mimeograph because the elementary kids where getting high sniffing it. They said it was a gateway drug to sniffing glue in art class
Baucuva about 1 year ago
I think all my white out has dried up.
magicwalnut Premium Member about 1 year ago
I took typing in high school in 1958. it’s about the only thing I learned in school that I still use.
DHBirr about 1 year ago
“Shut up, you crummy kid,” I explained.
22Wu33/es Premium Member about 1 year ago
Bought mine in high school, when I had to start doing “papers.”
22Wu33/es Premium Member about 1 year ago
I remember mimeos, too.
walstib Premium Member about 1 year ago
We saved our college Smith-Coronas for the grandkids to play with.
Steverino Premium Member about 1 year ago
We had a typewriter that was so old, I think they typed the Bible on it.
Scott S about 1 year ago
In the late 1990s I saw a manual typewriter, circa 1900 in an antique mall. A 3×5 card attached to it read “Y2K compliant.”
CoffeeBob Premium Member about 1 year ago
Tell him about the telegraph machine! Paging Sam Morse!
billdaviswords about 1 year ago
My dad worked for a company called “Modern Business Machines” and repaired mimeographs and adding machines (and comptometers!)
BW42 about 1 year ago
A bit earlier there were the typewriters that let you change fonts. The IBM Selectric, inspired perhaps by the invention of the golf ball, was the most famous. But one of my grandfathers had one back in the 19-teens that had cylinders of type that you could change, sort of like a later ASR-33 teletype, that he and my grandmother could use for typing mathematics papers including different alphabets.
gopher gofer about 1 year ago
let me tell you about the tv that took up most of the living room and didn’t even broadcast in color…
joyscooter about 1 year ago
Sadly, I’m old enough to know what a mimeograph machine is. Learned how to use one in high school when I was taking a business machines class, which was right after my stenoghraphy class. (I swear I graduated in the 20th Century, 1975 to be exact. LOL!!)
nostall about 1 year ago
Passing on knowledge: When at Basic and AIT in the military they always ask for volunteers for stuff and usually the thing you believed you had volunteered for wasn’t even close to what they called it – with one exception. If they asked, “Can anyone type?!” at formation it turns out it wasn’t a trick; that volunteer would be sent to the Company HQ or Battalion HQ and pretty much stayed there typing and drinking coffee etc. Yes, I learned this too late. Anyone thinking of or young enough to joinup, keep this in mind!
paullp Premium Member about 1 year ago
My typewriter has the distinction of having been a calendar pin-up. It’s a portable purchased by my Dad in the mid-60s, and I used it to type high school and college papers in the 70s. In 2014, I found one a calendar that featured typewriters (the selection was based on various design aspects and overall popularity). Well, my Dad’s typewriter was this calendar’s Miss December, so of course I had to buy it — not to mention that I like typewriters.
I still have it, though I haven’t used it in something over three decades. For any typewriter aficionados out there, it’s a Hermes 3000.
Jack Bell Premium Member about 1 year ago
We have a very old portable typewriter on a shelf in our living room. Young children are intrigued with it.