Typewriter, the official device of that satisfying click sound from the movies. Typewriters were once a popular form of typing up essays and document in a clear and formal way in which regular handwritten documents could not replicate. Now they are relics of the past due to the rise of personal computers, allowing so much for functionality with less hoops to jump through.
The first commercially produced typewriters appeared on scene in 1874, but became widespread in offices until the mid 1880s. Throughout this time there has been many manufactures and companies who added improvements over time. Historians believes that the typewriter was invented 52 time in some form by other inventors and thinkers. This helped to create competition and develope many types of typewriters.
The common mechanical typewriters works like this, the keyboard is in the same order as the keys on a computer or on a digital one on a cellphone. When a is press, for example the F key, a lever swings and then swings another lever called a type hammer. The hammer has a letter on it, so when it strikes a spool of ribbon ink. The hammer sandwiches the ribbon between the paper and the hammer, leaving a printed letter on the paper. Once the button is released a spring pulls the hammer to its resting position. Then the paper moves slightly to the left and the process is repeated until the paper reaches the end, in which a bell is rung and in older machines you have to manually move the paper to the right causing the paper to move to up.
And that how a basic mechanical typewriter works. Just how I mentioned before, there are tons of machines created by many companies, so it would be too much to cover. The typewriters were naturally phased out thanks to the personal computer and printer which made typing and editing a breeze. Honestly the only reason typewriters had a longer life in relevance is due to the portability of early computers and the cheaper cost of a typewriter. Now having a typewriter is more of a novelty than anything as a phone with no physical keyboard is much easier to type and edit with.
Source: http://www.explainthatstuff.com/typewriter.html
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Typewriter#History
I’m too spoiled with the riches of technology today. When I see typewriters I just think how tedious it would be to do editing by hand with white-out as well as all of the paper I would waste. I’ll happily hold onto my personal computer but as always great blog!
ReplyDeleteAs Gabriel noted, we have come a long way from the typewriter. These machines look painstaking for us now, but I'm sure at its prime it was as beneficial to society as smart phones are to us nowadays. I think it would be a little annoying but pretty fun to type with spring-loaded keys! Good post.
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