Sujet : International Typewriter Day (23 June) De : benlizro (at) *nospam* ihug.co.nz (Ross Clark) Groupes :sci.lang Date : 24. Jun 2024, 02:43:41 Autres entêtes Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider Message-ID :<v5aj0q$nis7$1@dont-email.me> User-Agent : Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 6.0; rv:52.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/52.9.1
I don't need to explain what a typewriter is, do I? Crystal's historical notes: 1714 - Henry Mill (English engineer) patents "an artificial machine or method for impressing or transcribing of lettrs, one after another, as in writing, whereby all writing whatsoever may be engrossed in paper or parchment to neat and exact as not to be distinguished from print". "No trace of this exists, if it was ever produced." Sounds like a pipe dream. 23-6-1868 (Milwaukee) - A bunch of Americans, including Christopher Latham Sholes and Carlos Glidden, patented a "type-writer", which became the first commercially successful device. (Remington started manufacturing it in 1873, with QWERTY keyboard layout.) He doesn't mention a date when the typewriter became obsolete. The typewriter that came with my first office here had been customized by Bruce Biggs to include a few phonetic symbols. I hung on to it well into the office-computer age, because putting phonetic symbols into text via computer, at first, was as cumbersome as drawing them by hand. Also I just liked typewriters. I still own one, but haven't used it for years. Looking for a buyer.