View Full Version : Remember the Typewriter?
ddan32162
07-05-2012, 06:08 AM
A bit of Whimsy ! I think you will LOVE it.
La máquina de escribir. L. Anderson. (Lio en los Grandes Almacenes) - YouTube (http://www.youtube.com/watch_popup?v=G4nX0Xrn-wo&sns=em)
Taltarzac725
07-05-2012, 06:17 AM
A bit of Whimsy ! I think you will LOVE it.
La máquina de escribir. L. Anderson. (Lio en los Grandes Almacenes) - YouTube (http://www.youtube.com/watch_popup?v=G4nX0Xrn-wo&sns=em)
Thanks, that was fun.
LatDoc
07-05-2012, 07:23 AM
Cute...thanks.....I sold typewriters for five years in Philly while in college....a career about equal to a pinsetter at the bowling alley in retrospect.
kathy and al
07-05-2012, 08:53 AM
Simply amazing. Along with the previous post I can claim my own "pinsetter at the bowling alley" moments when while in Jr. High School I was able to attain typing speeds of 90wpm. In high school, and for those who remember, I had 2 companies-Royal and Underwood come to my high school to watch me type 110 wpm. They never offered me a potential job upon graduation but that ended up working OK for me!! Then along came the IBM Selectric and typists never had to manually return the carriage ever again!!! Don't know if I could ever have gotten to 125-130 wpm and will never know.
Redrok
07-05-2012, 08:58 AM
I attained the blazing speed of 17 wpm in High School (without mistakes) on a manual typewriter. I think the teacher took pity on me and gave me a passing grade.
The best thing ever about computers was the backspace key!!
2BNTV
07-05-2012, 12:50 PM
My sister type 100 words per minute on a manual typewriter.
She refused to use a computer when they first came out. I can only imagine how fast she could have typed, so she would use a lot of paper if a mistake was made. This was pre liquid paper.
BTW - Thanks for posting this.
justjim
07-05-2012, 01:05 PM
I took "personal typing" one semester in High School. There was about half dozen guys in the class who took it too----teacher was good looking! Actually, the class was one of the best "things" I did in H.S. Seems like I got up to about 45 words per minute which wasn't bad for a guy, huh?
asianthree
07-05-2012, 02:16 PM
still like the feel of keys
jnieman
07-05-2012, 02:43 PM
Back in the 70's I worked for an insurance company. I used to have to type alot of narrative using a dictaphone and 7 pieces of paper and 7 pieces of carbon paper. When I made a mistake I had to erase it 7 times using the long typing eraser with the little brush on the end! That brings back memories!
Deerfly
07-06-2012, 06:44 AM
Went to a school auction years ago and they must have had 500 IBM Selectric typewriters. The ones with the letters on a ball. The poor auctioneer couldn't get a bid from any of the thousand or so people there. Finally he asked for $1 each. He said you could use them for a boat anchor. Still didn't get a bid. Wish I would have bought some of the solid oak typing desks and chairs that went for less than $10. This was in about 1975.
senior citizen
07-06-2012, 07:54 AM
Simply amazing. Along with the previous post I can claim my own "pinsetter at the bowling alley" moments when while in Jr. High School I was able to attain typing speeds of 90wpm. In high school, and for those who remember, I had 2 companies-Royal and Underwood come to my high school to watch me type 110 wpm. They never offered me a potential job upon graduation but that ended up working OK for me!! Then along came the IBM Selectric and typists never had to manually return the carriage ever again!!! Don't know if I could ever have gotten to 125-130 wpm and will never know.
A blast from the past for sure.
I learned on the IBM Selectric as a high school freshman and could also type 100 words plus plus a minute.........with accuracy.
It's actually one of the best skills to learn, as I've heard from people during my lifetime who wished they had learned to type......who are relegated to hunting and pecking forever.........
oatmealgirls
07-06-2012, 08:55 AM
A bit of Whimsy ! I think you will LOVE it.
Yes! Well done!
:smiley:
kathy and al
07-07-2012, 06:38 AM
A blast from the past for sure.
I learned on the IBM Selectric as a high school freshman and could also type 100 words plus plus a minute.........with accuracy.
It's actually one of the best skills to learn, as I've heard from people during my lifetime who wished they had learned to type......who are relegated to hunting and pecking forever.........
Never did I realize what a huge plus it was going to be in the future to be able to type fast and accurately. With the advent of the computer over the years it has proven to be a real asset. Congratulations on your school typing speeds. Still think to this day that if I had the opportunity to use the IBM Selectric years ago in high school, that I may have been able to attain a 125-130 wpm in tests. When I see most people today using the keyboard I realize just how fast both you and I could navigate the "keys".
senior citizen
07-07-2012, 06:58 AM
Never did I realize what a huge plus it was going to be in the future to be able to type fast and accurately. With the advent of the computer over the years it has proven to be a real asset. Congratulations on your school typing speeds. Still think to this day that if I had the opportunity to use the IBM Selectric years ago in high school, that I may have been able to attain a 125-130 wpm in tests. When I see most people today using the keyboard I realize just how fast both you and I could navigate the "keys".
What's nice is that some of my letters are actually worn off my computer keyboard, but it doesn't matter..........once you have them memorized.
What I cannot do is type on the tiny I-phone or Smart Phone.
We had to get one , as we were told that there were NO PHONES in the Lifestyle Visit homes......nor was there one in the home we rented for the extra month..........my husband who hunts and pecks on a keyboard, was able to manage to text and enter some data, but I found it frustrating.
The I-Phone did come in handy for a navigational device and for taking pictures and "sending them" off to family and friends immediately, plus a zillion other uses..........but as far as TYPING, forget about it.
I don't know how the younger folk "text" with two hands......once I was trying to contact the Hyatt Regency at the Orlando Airport as we decided to leave one day early to return the rental car and check in to our hotel rather than a mad dash to the airport...........and I was trying to contact the "desk" etc..........very frustrating.....as I had to type in all our information.........but I guess , like anything else, it would come to me eventually.
senior citizen
07-07-2012, 07:06 AM
Back in the 70's I worked for an insurance company. I used to have to type alot of narrative using a dictaphone and 7 pieces of paper and 7 pieces of carbon paper. When I made a mistake I had to erase it 7 times using the long typing eraser with the little brush on the end! That brings back memories!
I remember the dictaphone and the multiple carbon papers from the mid 1960's. I also remember when they brought in the FIRST "huge" IBM computer to the center of the office..........they hired an 18 year old fellow to learn how to use it; he was being trained by IBM computer experts. It was unlike anything today. All encased in a glass room.
Having been a private secretary, I also remember when the executives would send me to the actual file room........where all the documents and papers were kept. Now, everything is saved on the computer.
How things have changed. A blast from the past. I always loved typewriters. My parents bought me my first one when I was 13 and a freshman in high school with that I.B.M. Selectric in the typing class.
skyguy79
07-07-2012, 08:17 AM
I learned to type in high school on an old manual typwriter with no marking on any of the keys. At the end of the year I had the highest grade in the school, but disappointed my teacher. She put the pressure on me before the final exam by telling me she expect me to be her only student to get 100%. Needless to say, I didn't make it; I was a failure!
http://www.alienbuggy.com/images/smiley/extra/smiley002.gif
Oh, if only I could have learned to play the musical instruments I've played like I could play the typwriter. {sigh} :(
Schaumburger
07-07-2012, 11:45 AM
I received a manual typewriter when I graduated from high school...took it to Loyola University with me and made some money typing papers for kids without typewriters. Now the typewriter has sat in my garage for many years. I can't bring myself to get rid of it as it was gift from my parents. Now every college student brings a laptop with them to college or uses a computer at home if they are commuter students. The white paint on the N key on my 4 year old laptop has totally worn off . . . My nieces who are in college say I text about as fast as a grandma.
cybrgeezer
07-07-2012, 05:49 PM
I took "personal typing" one semester in High School. There was about half dozen guys in the class who took it too----teacher was good looking! Actually, the class was one of the best "things" I did in H.S. Seems like I got up to about 45 words per minute which wasn't bad for a guy, huh?
My parents, who had one high school diploma between them, told me to listen to the school's counselors about courses to take to prepare for college, but they insisted I take two classes: typing and, when I was old enough, driver's ed.
At the start of my sophomore year in high school, in the fall of 1960, I signed up for typing and didn't like the idea. I knew the class would be full of girls who would all be better at this than I would.
So, imagine my delight to find the class was almost all boys -- members of the football team looking for an "easy" class to stay eligible to play.
As for typing and driver's ed, I spent 47 years in one form of journalism or another, including 39 years in newspapers. I can say those two classes are the only ones I've used every day since high school.
BarryRX
07-07-2012, 06:13 PM
Probably one of the most useful courses I ever took. I am surprised that no one has mentioned Jerry Lewis' skit with the typewriter.
TerpDawg
07-07-2012, 06:17 PM
. . .As for typing and driver's ed, I spent 47 years in one form of journalism or another, including 39 years in newspapers. I can say those two classes are the only ones I've used every day since high school.[/QUOTE]
Geezer: Glad to see there is at least one other ink stained devil in this forum. I spent 30 years at a major metro daily but never had a typing class in my life. An old college professor tested me for admission to the U of Md journalism school and declared my 40 mistakes a minute with two fingers perfectly acceptable. And, I can still burn up a key board with those two digits.
kathy and al
07-08-2012, 06:52 AM
What's nice is that some of my letters are actually worn off my computer keyboard, but it doesn't matter..........once you have them memorized.
What I cannot do is type on the tiny I-phone or Smart Phone.
We had to get one , as we were told that there were NO PHONES in the Lifestyle Visit homes......nor was there one in the home we rented for the extra month..........my husband who hunts and pecks on a keyboard, was able to manage to text and enter some data, but I found it frustrating.
The I-Phone did come in handy for a navigational device and for taking pictures and "sending them" off to family and friends immediately, plus a zillion other uses..........but as far as TYPING, forget about it.
I don't know how the younger folk "text" with two hands......once I was trying to contact the Hyatt Regency at the Orlando Airport as we decided to leave one day early to return the rental car and check in to our hotel rather than a mad dash to the airport...........and I was trying to contact the "desk" etc..........very frustrating.....as I had to type in all our information.........but I guess , like anything else, it would come to me eventually.
Couldn't agree with you any more insofar as the tiny I-Pads, etc are concerned. The two hand approach (especially by the youngsters) to these tiny devices certainly defies the old asdfg space ;lkjh that we learned many years ago. I'm sure you could navigate the keyboard (as well as myself) even if there were no identifying letters and numbers on them.
carm310
07-08-2012, 07:01 AM
We still have a typewriter where I work and believe it or not I had to use it earlier this year to type some 1099-Misc forms. The typewriter is dragged out of confinement once a year for this purpose alone. And as for making mistakes....I type at a snail's pace, no room for mistakes on multiple page forms.
On the fun side, my daughter plays violin. I enjoyed this and will share with her!
I remember the dictaphone and the multiple carbon papers from the mid 1960's. I also remember when they brought in the FIRST "huge" IBM computer to the center of the office..........they hired an 18 year old fellow to learn how to use it; he was being trained by IBM computer experts. It was unlike anything today. All encased in a glass room.
Having been a private secretary, I also remember when the executives would send me to the actual file room........where all the documents and papers were kept. Now, everything is saved on the computer.
How things have changed. A blast from the past. I always loved typewriters. My parents bought me my first one when I was 13 and a freshman in high school with that I.B.M. Selectric in the typing class.
I used to run some of those "huge" IBM computers. Back in my day they did not even have a monitor - all the system commands were basically printed and typed/keypunched - and if you ran out of that green bar paper (with the holes on the side) - the computer the system basically stopped until you put in some more...LOL
skyguy79
07-11-2012, 09:04 PM
I used to run some of those "huge" IBM computers. Back in my day they did not even have a monitor - all the system commands were basically printed and typed/keypunched - and if you ran out of that green bar paper (with the holes on the side) - the computer the system basically stopped until you put in some more...LOLI understand exactly what you're talking about. In 1969 I went to work with the NYSDMV in the computer room. We had one IBM computer system for batch work, but forget the numbers on it. The other was an IBM 360 TP real time system, then later a 370.
At the time we were told that our system was the largest in the US. We had something like about 16 tape drives, loads of data drums, disk packs, literally millions of auto registrations and driver license records and yes... the little bouncy metal ball on the typewriter!
Quite frankly I do try to forget those years. Rotating 3 shifts with occasionally working 14 days straight or 16 hour days wasn't all that much fun.
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