A 'typewriter rebellion' is underway. Here's what that means and why it's attracting kids

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  • Опубликовано: 14 апр 2024
  • You might call the sound of a typewriter the sound of a rebellion as young people are buying the machines as an escape from computers.

Комментарии • 2,7 тыс.

  • @MJDHX
    @MJDHX 29 дней назад +3683

    Best Part: No Ads!

  • @laurencaulton103
    @laurencaulton103 29 дней назад +2879

    No battery. No charge. I miss it.

    • @philiplubduck6107
      @philiplubduck6107 26 дней назад +76

      Yeah but you have to supply ink and align paper. Also no back space is a problem except for one or two expensive models with a white ink.

    • @Moonchilling
      @Moonchilling 26 дней назад

      @@philiplubduck6107that’s why whiteout was invented

    • @theOlLineRebel
      @theOlLineRebel 26 дней назад +31

      No backspace? Many has that. As for the ink….invariably it lasted for ages. Maybe if you’re a deadly serious secretary in a serious business. But for us regular people at home, almost never heard of replacing ink.

    • @bite-sizedshorts9635
      @bite-sizedshorts9635 26 дней назад +24

      @@theOlLineRebel I can't count how many times I had to change ribbons on typewriters. Perhaps you didn't type much. Anyway, new ribbons to fit most models are still available online. I have a re-inker machine, so I can re-ink a ribbon and use it over and over till I wear holes in it.

    • @bite-sizedshorts9635
      @bite-sizedshorts9635 26 дней назад +15

      @@philiplubduck6107 Ribbons don't cost that much. You'd have to buy paper for a printer anyway, if you need hard copies. If you're a good typist, you don't make many errors. If you make an error, there's Wite-Out and correction tape.

  • @DougWIngate
    @DougWIngate 11 дней назад +275

    It's not just a nostalgia/hipster/sentimental thing. It's legit the most efficient way to quickly push out a body of text without needing to boot up a computer. The typewriter is not obsolete, there is absolutely a market for it.

    • @Pedgo1986
      @Pedgo1986 8 дней назад +16

      It depends but even if its not most effective way i think that's not the point. Personally i believe people are slowly fed up with all this "smart" technology, constantly being accessible, signed and subscribed an connected even for efin kitchen sink and we will see renaissance of "dumb" offline old-school technologies and people going "off the grid" so the speak by limiting they internet access. i found my old Nokia 3310 that indestructible beast is still working and when i think about it it has anything that i need the only "real" thing that new smartphone is giving me are games when iam waiting somewhere sometimes maps everything else can wait when i come home and boot pc and frankly i don't even read mails on phone i just refuse be 24/7 in touch and working or dealing with issues directly or indirectly i have me time and my physical and mental health is better then ever.

    • @alyssa7867
      @alyssa7867 7 дней назад +6

      Legible text on a page, no electricity required.

    • @nickiemcnichols5397
      @nickiemcnichols5397 5 дней назад +2

      @@alyssa7867unless it’s an IBM Selectric.

  • @jeanlefranc3817
    @jeanlefranc3817 24 дня назад +550

    That’s brilliant. No deep fakes, no hacking, just straight man-machine interface. A ray of light in an increasingly dark world.

    • @wizrom3046
      @wizrom3046 12 дней назад +20

      But how are the corporate overlords going to insert popup ads on a typewriter???
      NOOOOOOOOOO!!! 😫

    • @jonnybolin7516
      @jonnybolin7516 8 дней назад +1

      Your so right. You know, I just felt like I needed to ask, are you 100 percent sure that when you die you will go to heaven? I don’t usually comment like this, but your comment just stood out to me so much.

    • @diegomenezes8838
      @diegomenezes8838 2 дня назад

      The things americans do in order to just don't learning writing in cursive

    • @jeanlefranc3817
      @jeanlefranc3817 2 дня назад

      @@diegomenezes8838 yes, you have a point.

  • @JBlinky67
    @JBlinky67 25 дней назад +1144

    My grandfather was a repairman and his work dried up in the 90s. He died in 06, but always said typewriters would be back. He knew.

    • @varoonnone7159
      @varoonnone7159 18 дней назад +37

      I don't want to be mean but it's a fad

    • @JBlinky67
      @JBlinky67 18 дней назад +17

      @varoonnone7159 LOL. No problem. Oh I totally agree 😆

    • @painkillerjones6232
      @painkillerjones6232 18 дней назад +12

      @@varoonnone7159 Unless you don't want ANY chance of someone knowing what you're transcribing, writing, planning...

    • @varoonnone7159
      @varoonnone7159 17 дней назад

      @@painkillerjones6232
      Like uber conspirationists who represent a fraction of the population 🤗

    • @Mr.Reckless
      @Mr.Reckless 17 дней назад +10

      I'm sorry for the loss of your grandfather. My condolences go out to you and your family.

  • @myidentityisinjesus8880
    @myidentityisinjesus8880 29 дней назад +1650

    I told my husband years ago that a generation will come along that will reject all technology. For my own sanity, I turn my phone off when I go to bed on Saturday nights and don't turn it back on until 6pm Sunday night.

    • @BR549-8
      @BR549-8 29 дней назад +50

      That's a great idea.

    • @cutterc2399
      @cutterc2399 27 дней назад +42

      My phone is turned off at 9:00 PM every night. Monday through Thursday it is turned on at 6:00 AM. Friday through Sunday it remains off unless I need to use it.

    • @bite-sizedshorts9635
      @bite-sizedshorts9635 26 дней назад +39

      I decided not to have a cellphone, as I don't want to be available 24/7/365. I like to be totally out of contact at night and any time I take a walk outside or take a ride in my car. My computer is in my home office, so I can leave it alone. It runs 24/7, as it will last longer that way. It's over 12 years old and works perfectly. And it keeps up with new software fine.

    • @myidentityisinjesus8880
      @myidentityisinjesus8880 26 дней назад +44

      @@bite-sizedshorts9635 when I retire, I'm getting a landline and a flip phone. I live in rural America so having a phone in case of emergency is smart, I just don't need it to be a smart phone.

    • @LyricsQuest
      @LyricsQuest 26 дней назад +6

      Good idea. I don't have a phone, so I guess that's why I'm always good? Dunno.

  • @Safferpsyche
    @Safferpsyche 18 дней назад +847

    Now THAT'S the kind of rebellion I can get behind. 😊
    Typewriters, landlines and vinyl records, radio, cinema are much more relaxed way of living than TV, cells and computers.

    • @u2bear377
      @u2bear377 14 дней назад +27

      Spades, forks, axes, stoves and hurricane lamps and bonfire storylelling is even more relaxed way of living.

    • @Safferpsyche
      @Safferpsyche 14 дней назад +7

      @@u2bear377 Yeah I know, but I don't mind working in symbiosis with the Matrix if it doesn't try to kill me every 5 seconds.

    • @themarquis336
      @themarquis336 13 дней назад

      You’re just incapable of accepting and adapting to contemporary reality. You’re a weak link.

    • @Amanditititito
      @Amanditititito 13 дней назад +19

      ... said a guy on RUclips

    • @RekLara
      @RekLara 13 дней назад +11

      Oh landlines!!! They were so reliable and they worked even in a power outage!! I miss them too. You forgot cassette tapes and VCRs.

  • @vidhoard
    @vidhoard 7 дней назад +19

    Look into the "Dumb Phone" rebellion too! It's just like this but with adults opting for flip phones, old phones, or specially designed phones with zero social media or distractions! Love this. ❤

    • @ivegotlungfoot6890
      @ivegotlungfoot6890 День назад +1

      i'm looking for an old phone like this because i'm sick of smart phones and the internet

    • @vidhoard
      @vidhoard 6 часов назад

      @@ivegotlungfoot6890 I got the Sunbeam Pro! It's awesome. But expensive.

  • @madmanmapper
    @madmanmapper 29 дней назад +976

    It's a completely different experience from typing on a computer. Psychologically. And definitely in a good way. It's like a mental exercise.

    • @espsc1981
      @espsc1981 26 дней назад +6

      🤓

    • @ButWhyMe...
      @ButWhyMe... 25 дней назад +2

      Could you explain?

    • @silversilk8438
      @silversilk8438 25 дней назад +19

      Is it the same way as taking notes on paper versus on computer? But I thought writing the words out by hand is better than pressing non-distinct buttons… so is it just the feeling of permanence?

    • @user-cg2eb1gq7i
      @user-cg2eb1gq7i 25 дней назад

      @@ButWhyMe... Quick example when working on a manual typewriter, you need to be very conscious of what you are typing, no spell checker only yourself and a dictionary, one mistake, I have made a few whilst typing this reply to you lovely, isn't just a quick backspace and type again It is a painstaking process of rolling the paper feed, ensuring you count correctly the number of times you roll the paper back, to enable you to white out the mistake, make sure that it is dry and then get back to the line and in line with the one you were originally typing.
      I sincerely hope I explained and really haven't put you off trying a manual typewriter, I had an exercise in typing class one day, using different characters made a picture a lady in a crinoline dress, following a pattern supplied by my fab teacher, it did take a lot of concentration, however not being talented at art, I was able to create something in a medium that I was nearly competent in;-)
      Please give it a go, there are some amazing machines out there and they are a pleasure to use, Best wishes

    • @swisschalet1658
      @swisschalet1658 25 дней назад +34

      @@ButWhyMe... It's actually hard to press the keys down...way harder than a computer keyboard. It really exercises the wrists and fingers. It's loud, in a good way. It is a challenge to get "fast" at typing on it. You have to push the keys really far down, not just a small distance, like with a computer keyboard.....like 3/4th an inch versus an 8th of an inch on a modern keyboard, depending on the machine. You can see the inner workings...watch the keys strike the paper and see the ink ribbon advance with each strike, unlike a computer where you have no idea what's going on inside. There is no spell-check. There is no backspace over a letter...once you type it, it's on the paper permanently unless you use correction tape, White-Out, or a special eraser.

  • @Lyle_918
    @Lyle_918 29 дней назад +1162

    1974: First office job, IBM selectric to type reports, no spell check, no repeat. Dictionary within reach.

    • @bmaxdlux3169
      @bmaxdlux3169 27 дней назад +22

      Ahh... The Good 'ol Days.
      🙂👍

    • @Billy_Bad_Ass
      @Billy_Bad_Ass 27 дней назад

      @@bmaxdlux3169 Yes, I often think about the _Good ol' Days_ -- and how much they truly *SUCKED*.

    • @MeMeDaVinci
      @MeMeDaVinci 26 дней назад +39

      Don't forget the thesaurus 😊

    • @kenc2257
      @kenc2257 26 дней назад +52

      Ohhh...those fancy IBM Selectrics were the "Cadillac" of typewriters, back in the day. With the changeable "ball," and the ability to switch between Pica and Elite. Some of them must have had a memory buffer, and a very fast typist could finish typing, and the ball would continue for a few more keystrokes (that was magical).

    • @jannajacob219
      @jannajacob219 25 дней назад +25

      That was always my favorite typewriter to use. They never jammed and they were fast.

  • @christina_7028
    @christina_7028 21 день назад +175

    Back in 2002, i typed up an essay for my junior year. I didnt have a printer and my teacher requested we had it printed out. My teacher was so impressed that i used a typewriter. He announced it to my whole class. Miss that typewriter

    • @DanAndHoe
      @DanAndHoe 11 дней назад

      I never grew up around typewriters (late twenties now) but got one, exactly for that purpose. I don’t have a printer and sometimes I need things physically, but don’t feel like going to the library to get it printed.

    • @michaelzero5278
      @michaelzero5278 10 дней назад +5

      It was all worth it

    • @HelloKittyFanMan
      @HelloKittyFanMan 7 дней назад +2

      If that's something that you still like (because you say you miss it), then why don't you still have it?

    • @christina_7028
      @christina_7028 7 дней назад +3

      @@HelloKittyFanMan I had to leave my home suddenly and not all of my possessions were kept for me.

    • @HelloKittyFanMan
      @HelloKittyFanMan 7 дней назад

      Oh wow, @@christina_7028, I'm so sorry about that; how sad! I hope you're doing OK!

  • @1MysteryZ1967
    @1MysteryZ1967 10 дней назад +24

    Type writers cannot be hacked. Brilliant!

    • @BitTheByte
      @BitTheByte 7 дней назад +3

      I recall reading somewhere you can actually get some clues about what someone was typing from the ink strip in the typewriter! It’s actually pretty fascinating. Mix this with analyzing the wear patterns on the keys, advanced modern imaging tech, and some other fun stuff you can figure what they were writing. If you have a document you can figure out exactly what type writer wrote it and recover deleted or obstructed text.
      This isn’t “hacking” in the traditional sense but it has some remarkable similarities

    • @1MysteryZ1967
      @1MysteryZ1967 7 дней назад +1

      @@BitTheByte truth.

  • @scotttyson607
    @scotttyson607 25 дней назад +820

    When I was growing up in the 1970s, I was miserable in school because I was hopelessly dyslexic and teachers at the time just thought I was stupid. That all started to change when I began to play with my grandmothers manual typewriter and taught myself how to use it. Over the span of about a year and a half I became proficient at it and it "cured" my reading and spelling problem. Eventually, I started earning top grades and graduated with honors.
    I am certain that learning the correct use of a manual typewriter had a lot to do with my success in school and life in general.

    • @silversilk8438
      @silversilk8438 25 дней назад +12

      How did that cure you? I thought dyslexia was about reading comprehension.

    • @sarahm.5356
      @sarahm.5356 25 дней назад +63

      ​@@silversilk8438Dyslexia isn't about comprehension. It's a glitch in the brain about processing the letters you're seeing. There are other disorders that affect reading comprehension, such as hyperlexia.

    • @vegastrina
      @vegastrina 24 дня назад +42

      Former tutor here for children that fall under the dyslexic umbrella (which also includes dyscalculia and dysgraphia).
      A glitch in the brain is a good explanation. It is a disconnect between what is seen or heard and what is communicated in some form. People who fall under this umbrella tend to struggle with focus, energy control, communication in any form, processing, space awareness, and so on. Not all people under this umbrella are the same. People under this umbrella tend to have above average IQs, are artists, thinkers, and so on. More people fall under this umbrella than people who are "normal". Tactile objects, such as a typewriter, are tremendously helpful for all ranges of learning and comprehension.
      At younger ages, a break from learning every 20 minutes is a fabulous stress reducer. Dyslexics tend to do better with pictorial languages, reading is best started at age 10 (but not always)...with proper guidance they will catch up to their peers in a handful of weeks, starting too soon can cause a myriad of blocks that then need to be remolded, which in turn causes a delay in learning that is followed by unnecessary struggles.
      The dyslexic umbrella is hereditary and is almost not ever diagnosed unless it appears in academics. A person can have every symptom of this condition and not ever know why they do certain things because it didn't show up during the school years, if they were sent to school (versus home education)...and even then it could have been dismissed as something else.
      Dyslexia is greatly unsupported in all circles, including education, it has barely been noticed and acknowledged, even today, despite that a few specialized schools exist, or have existed. Even though it has gained recognition, it still doesn't receive the support that other learning conditions receive.
      Dyslexia used to be called word-blindness. Famous dyslexics include Whoppi Goldberg, Orlando Bloom, Albert Einstein, Jay Leno, Henry Winkler, Thomas Edison, Leonardo da Vinci, Steve Jobs, Carl Jung, Napoleon Bonaparte, Mohammad Ali.

    • @nidhishshivashankar4885
      @nidhishshivashankar4885 24 дня назад +5

      Why was typing so different for you as compared with writing?

    • @silversilk8438
      @silversilk8438 24 дня назад +3

      @@vegastrina Thanks for the explanation. How did they diagnose ol' Leonardo with dyslexia? (I ask it more as a rhetorical joke. I think he wrote his journals from left to write mirrored but... I don't think that's dyslexia.)

  • @Rosarium2007
    @Rosarium2007 29 дней назад +654

    I have a manual portable typewriter that I paid hardly anything for. Once saw such a device described as a “Y2K Compliant Laptop.

    • @connormclernon26
      @connormclernon26 26 дней назад +14

      I got mine for free when a neighbor was moving and didn’t want to take it with him. If I could find a tape for it, I’d be a lot happier.

    • @FiveBlackFootedFerrets
      @FiveBlackFootedFerrets 26 дней назад +7

      I have a Y2K compliant toaster too, and a bird feeder and... Millennium bug! (snort)

    • @Dargonhuman
      @Dargonhuman 25 дней назад +19

      You know you're old when you casually reference Y2k like it was a few years ago.
      Can someone pass me the fiber? My muscle rub hasn't absorbed in yet...

    • @007Julie
      @007Julie 25 дней назад

      @@connormclernon26try eBay, there are plenty of sellers who specialize in ink cartridges for a variety of typewriter models.

    • @stephenroot1012
      @stephenroot1012 25 дней назад

      @@connormclernon26 Check with office supplies dealers for new ribbons, copy paper and correction fluid. Depending on security some government agencies overseas are still using non-digital equipment to avoid hackers. All else fails try to find a video on re-inking your ribbon and go from there.

  • @dsmarty6395
    @dsmarty6395 13 дней назад +98

    1969 I graduated HS, proficient in Gregg shorthand and typing 72 words per minute on a manual typewriter. I wanted to become an executive secretary in NYC. My first typing job in Manhattan was at Bergdorf Goodman typing invitations and envelopes for sales events. I achieved my goals from Park Ave., NYC to California St., SF -supporting top executives. Now retired and smiling at the memories of those days. I’m happy there is renewed interest in the typewriter.

    • @suev3339
      @suev3339 10 дней назад +4

      Been there done that too - my first Secretary position was for my excellence in typing speed and accuracy. A wonderful skill of memory and fingers.

    • @dsmarty6395
      @dsmarty6395 10 дней назад

      @@suev3339 . . .the sound of the key strike and the carriage return was magical for me. I am still a fast typist. . .using one finger now on my iPad 🫣. When that cable show Mad Men came out, it took me right back to when I wore stockings, sling backs, and a dress every day to the office where people smoked, drank at lunch. . .and I had to address them as Mr.. . .🤔 The good old days -when you could not fake skills. Hope you’re doing well.

    • @ItsMefromSnuffys
      @ItsMefromSnuffys 10 дней назад +2

      Nice memory😊

    • @paanne1013
      @paanne1013 9 дней назад +3

      My older sister was just like you! She retired from a International Law firm in D.C. a few years ago and did quite well in life. I never got the hang of shorthand, but did type for a living and always hated it. lol

    • @noble604
      @noble604 9 дней назад +1

      Were the Bergdorf envelopes light purple? Did they use high quality stationery? In my imagination, I see the BG invitations being quite lovely in that day💜.

  • @user-hk6mt4uo4p
    @user-hk6mt4uo4p 10 дней назад +18

    As a software developer (past) I have concluded that anything analog is more human.

    • @alyssa7867
      @alyssa7867 7 дней назад +1

      I can't argue with you there. MP3 players are still cool, though.

    • @user-hk6mt4uo4p
      @user-hk6mt4uo4p 5 дней назад +1

      @@alyssa7867 You haven't lived until you've rewound a cassette tape with a pencil. 😏

    • @davemiller6055
      @davemiller6055 День назад

      @@user-hk6mt4uo4p Been there. Done that. I even spiced broken cassettes with scotch tape.

  • @mnossy11
    @mnossy11 25 дней назад +284

    “I love bread”. Very important words to type!

    • @deckiepoo
      @deckiepoo 18 дней назад +12

      Lol .. mine was always "Now is the time for all good men to come to the aid of their country.

    • @wellesradio
      @wellesradio 15 дней назад +1

      @@deckiepoofor some reason mine was always “I will always be the king.” It wasn’t a statement of any kind. I think maybe it’s the distribution of those letters on the keyboard combined with my typing ability at the time when I first wrote it. The quick brown fox was just too much. Purely associative, I think, and it stuck with me for years whenever I saw a keyboard.

    • @deckiepoo
      @deckiepoo 15 дней назад +1

      @@wellesradio ...😁 I understand.

    • @chunkymilk
      @chunkymilk 13 дней назад

      very cute.

    • @R_C420
      @R_C420 10 дней назад

      Good news for the Scranton branch. They need to start selling ink ribbons now though.
      Two forms of single use media to operate.. Much convenience, many improvement. Totally not just trolls trying to make annoying noise as much as possible, and claiming arguable other reasons for the activity.

  • @pgray5223
    @pgray5223 28 дней назад +544

    My husband gave me a 1937 typewriter for Christmas a couple years ago. It was the most played with thing that Christmas day. I had grandkids here ranging from 5 to 29 years old and they loved it! I was surprised at how much the teenagers enjoyed typing with it. And it isn't an "easy touch"!

    • @alienonion4636
      @alienonion4636 26 дней назад +24

      I learned to type on a manual that is nonelectric. I learned to love slamming the keys. I still find it funny that I scored low on speed tests because I was typing so fast the parts that strike the paper got stuck to each other. Being too fast made me too slow.

    • @bite-sizedshorts9635
      @bite-sizedshorts9635 26 дней назад +19

      @@alienonion4636 That's why the letters are arranged as they are on a standard keyboard. It keeps the hammers further apart for the most used letters.

    • @alienonion4636
      @alienonion4636 26 дней назад +4

      @@bite-sizedshorts9635 yes, I learned that along with typing in HS...1969 😁

    • @novampires223
      @novampires223 25 дней назад +12

      Remember shorthand? Loved it!

    • @kensingtonwick
      @kensingtonwick 25 дней назад +4

      Those are the best kind😊

  • @jungleno.
    @jungleno. 17 дней назад +72

    I am a male. I took a typing class in high school back in 1971. It helped immensely as I began a 21 year career in computer programming.
    A typewriter was a necessity back then.
    It’s a novelty now.

    • @littleripper312
      @littleripper312 14 дней назад +10

      Why are you telling us you're a male?

    • @jungleno.
      @jungleno. 13 дней назад +3

      @@littleripper312 “I am what I am and that’s what I am” said Popeye the sailor man.

    • @oz_jones
      @oz_jones 12 дней назад +11

      ​@@littleripper312 because it's important within context. Typists were still mostly women even back then

    • @robertlassiter907
      @robertlassiter907 12 дней назад +1

      Cool trivia. Troy Aikman won the Oklahoma State High School typing championship in 1983.

    • @robertlassiter907
      @robertlassiter907 12 дней назад

      @@jungleno.Booya!

  • @laceandribbonsviolin
    @laceandribbonsviolin 24 дня назад +13

    Good! The sound of typewriters is so comforting to me.

  • @ciaragarrity6425
    @ciaragarrity6425 29 дней назад +267

    This video somehow found me, I have an 100 year old typewriter passed down from generation to generation, I felt like using it now, feel like it’s an escape from modern technology that I needed in my life. Thought I was the only one.

    • @CricketsBay
      @CricketsBay 28 дней назад +8

      eBay is a great place to get tapes (ink) and replacement parts for old typewriters. And there are a surprising number of typewriter-repair shops in the U.S. which sell the replacement tapes, etc.

    • @buttercupcoffee5972
      @buttercupcoffee5972 25 дней назад +1

      Go for it. Tom hanks has a collection if typerwriters. I dont think it as odd ayou might think.

    • @DecrepitBiden
      @DecrepitBiden 25 дней назад

      You're NOT (the only one). I go to Hobby Lobby, & just touch rulers, erasers, protractors, pens & pencils, anything physical that I used to use in the 70's & 80's when I was in school.

    • @veeavakian3284
      @veeavakian3284 25 дней назад

      Thank you so much for this info! I never thought to look there. (duh on my part!)​@@CricketsBay

  • @edwardprice140
    @edwardprice140 24 дня назад +345

    One typing class kept me out of Vietnam in 1972, a manual typewriter is a work of art.

    • @SockTaters
      @SockTaters 18 дней назад +3

      How did the class keep you out of Vietnam?

    • @edwardprice140
      @edwardprice140 18 дней назад +20

      @@SockTaters I was a 6821 Weather ops.

    • @FiveBlackFootedFerrets
      @FiveBlackFootedFerrets 18 дней назад +10

      "The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog." One of a few sentences which when typed uses every alphabet key on a typewriter or keyboard. But you already knew that.

    • @alexislopez9355
      @alexislopez9355 17 дней назад

      You're a coward.

    • @alexislopez9355
      @alexislopez9355 17 дней назад

      You're a coward.

  • @Mickey-wp2rg
    @Mickey-wp2rg 9 дней назад +11

    I admire the enthusiasm in this young ones. My dad had an UNDERWOOD typewriter. Very few would have heard about it.

    • @misspnaylor
      @misspnaylor 7 дней назад

      Wow! That brought back a distant memory. The first typewriter I was assigned as a junior shorthand typist at a charted accountants was an Underwood. End of year accounts having to use black then red carbon paper.

    • @jeffreyhotchkiss9451
      @jeffreyhotchkiss9451 2 дня назад

      We had one in the family. Heavy item!

  • @abrahamfranco536
    @abrahamfranco536 12 дней назад +35

    This whole story was summed up in 1998… There is a scene in Saving Private Ryan when the young platoon guy scrambles to bring his belongings and drops his typewriter…and Tom Hanks just holds up the pen without saying a word. Brilliant.
    It’s not even about the machine itself, it’s about what’s been around a lot longer. It. Just. Works.

  • @user-yv2sc5qv7x
    @user-yv2sc5qv7x 29 дней назад +271

    A very worthwhile "trend"
    ... may it continue, and flourish

  • @bennetfox
    @bennetfox 29 дней назад +200

    All of a sudden there is a resurgence in Liquid Paper sales!!

    • @CDJNineteen83
      @CDJNineteen83 29 дней назад +15

      Could be a good stock tip.

    • @italia689
      @italia689 26 дней назад +7

      The last typewriter my dad owned (1990s) already had a backspace button.

    • @davidb2206
      @davidb2206 26 дней назад +13

      That was invented and marketed by that Monkees guy (Nesmith)'s mother. He, in turn, wrote "Different Drum," a major hit for Linda Ronstadt. Talented family.

    • @CS-gk1kn
      @CS-gk1kn 25 дней назад +14

      I had a tendency to be too heavy handed with the liquid; loved the tape (retype to erase). I was so thrilled when I got to use a newer typewriter that had the corrective tape cartridge!

    • @kitsunegiblaze8022
      @kitsunegiblaze8022 25 дней назад +6

      I thought we just called that "white out?" Also, I really wanna make a William S. Burroughs joke.

  • @sbarr10
    @sbarr10 11 дней назад +4

    "It's just you, and the keys." This is awesome!

  • @gymeni
    @gymeni 10 дней назад +6

    A family friend who was an Educator taught me how to type in 1973 when I was 10 years old and had recently lost my mother. She told me that it was a valuable skill and that I’d always be employable once I mastered it. Rest in peace, Mrs. Boyd.

  • @magicunicorn6535
    @magicunicorn6535 27 дней назад +151

    My high school typing skills supported me for almost 40 years.

    • @ElaineBarlow
      @ElaineBarlow 25 дней назад +1

      same!

    • @ExWEIMan
      @ExWEIMan 25 дней назад +5

      When I was looking for a job my wife would type my resumes. She got tired after about the sixth one so she gave me her high school typing book and said have at it. I didn't have a job, had lots of time, so I started on page one and worked my way through the book. Like you I have used what I learned for decades to type my work reports. I am retired but still do contract work typing my reports and emailing them when complete. I don't think I would ever go back to a typewriter because I make to many mistakes and the backspace key is my best friend.

    • @pkmcnett5649
      @pkmcnett5649 24 дня назад +2

      Same, but I could only type 45 wpm.

    • @TheDoctor394
      @TheDoctor394 24 дня назад +4

      Mine still do. I went to High School here in Australia in the early 1980s, and was one of the few boys to take typing class. Flash forward a few years and personal computers were starting to become a thing and, suddenly, typing was very important to both males and females. I continued to use a typewriter, first manual and then electronic, until I went shopping to buy a new cartridge and found out they weren't being sold anymore (I was behind the times with CDs and DVDs as well). So that was the end of my typewriter life, but I kind of still do miss it.

    • @gj8683
      @gj8683 22 дня назад +7

      When I was 13, my mother made me take typing lessons during the summer. This was back in the days when "real" guys didn't type. (That was for women to do.) I learned and kept the QWERTY habit through my whole career, from manual to electric typewriters to mainframes to laptops. Thanks Mom!!

  • @christinareynolds8179
    @christinareynolds8179 25 дней назад +27

    I have been using a typewriter for four years, since I was 20. Additionally, I sew on a 1906 Singer treadle Sewing Machine. 😊

    • @Someone-tn8ur
      @Someone-tn8ur 12 дней назад

      Amazing... how did you manage to get RUclips to load on your typewriter?

    • @christinareynolds8179
      @christinareynolds8179 12 дней назад +1

      @@Someone-tn8ur it’s very easy, set your tablet on the space where the paper goes.

    • @Someone-tn8ur
      @Someone-tn8ur 12 дней назад

      @@christinareynolds8179 Ah, so smart :)

  • @like90
    @like90 9 дней назад +5

    I love the appeal of typewriters. I have one and I'm keeping it forever. I think it's really something that you can't get anywhere else, the permanency, the texture of the paper, no ads, no battery or cord to plug in. It's just pure writing

  • @AJOlesen
    @AJOlesen 7 дней назад +6

    "with a type writer, what you said is what you said, you can't change that."
    Whiteout: "May I introduce myself?"

  • @Vejur9000
    @Vejur9000 25 дней назад +44

    Typewriters are irresistible. There’s nothing like the satisfaction of pounding each letter out, by your own hands.

    • @ivandubinsky1857
      @ivandubinsky1857 24 дня назад +1

      Now people will have to learn how to spell as there is no auto-correct on typewriters.

    • @Amanditititito
      @Amanditititito 13 дней назад

      ... just like every computer keyboard on Earth.

  • @johnvanderploeg6707
    @johnvanderploeg6707 28 дней назад +160

    I miss my old typewriter.
    The only drawback I ever had with it was if I was typing too fast, a couple of the keys could become tangled.
    Still, it is fun to remember the time of being "unplugged".

    • @Alinor24
      @Alinor24 25 дней назад +8

      That is exactly the reason why the letters on a typewriter aren't in alphabetical order. They changed it so the letters you often use together are far away from each other. That way the key tangeling happens less often.

    • @bazza945
      @bazza945 25 дней назад

      A Hazzard that went with the machine. You must acquire the proper rhythm.

    • @LeeLLewis
      @LeeLLewis 25 дней назад

      I never had that problem. 😄

    • @amoureux6502
      @amoureux6502 23 дня назад

      ​@@Alinor24 For anyone who's curious the most common letters to tangle before the introduction of QWERTY were t and h! T was directly below h so hitting them in succession could halt a typist in their tracks (and just look at how many times in this message alone I've typed "th")

    • @HelloKittyFanMan
      @HelloKittyFanMan 7 дней назад

      If that's something that you still like (because you say you miss it), then why don't you still have it?

  • @Angbwillinspireu
    @Angbwillinspireu 18 дней назад +4

    When I was in high school in the 1980s, we had to take a typing class. Because our school didn't have a lot of funding, our typewriters were literally from 1910 through 1920s. I wish I had one of those old models now.

  • @CornbreadOracle
    @CornbreadOracle 20 дней назад +3

    There’s something very satisfying about the clickity clack of a typewriter. I miss that sound.

  • @gailcarey3597
    @gailcarey3597 24 дня назад +36

    I’ve had my Smith Corona for decades and it’s my grandchildren’s favorite item.
    I bought a record player and rotary phone just to watch them appreciate the past.
    Don’t forget the pleasure of reading a hardback book.

    • @thatonepossum5766
      @thatonepossum5766 9 дней назад +3

      Hardcover books are so nice. I typically go for them over paperbacks when I can afford it (which is unfortunately not often, since a book series will cost 2-3x more as hardcovers). Hardcovers aren’t as portable as paperbacks, but for me they totally make up for it in their durability. Glued bindings (what paperbacks are made with) fall apart so much faster than the hardcover’s sewn binding. I’ve got one book that I bought used, that has the pages completely separated from the spine. It’s only still together because of the sewn binding (cover is attached via glue on the front and last page).

    • @theflyingspaget
      @theflyingspaget 6 дней назад

      ​@@thatonepossum5766you're getting sewing in your hardbacks? Most of my hardbacks are glued.

  • @stage6fan475
    @stage6fan475 29 дней назад +192

    I've still got my mom's beloved Underwood typewriter, exactly like the one in the opening credits of 'Murder She Wrote'.

    • @cleliaparnell8743
      @cleliaparnell8743 28 дней назад +6

      I'm so jealous!!😊

    • @alanjameson8664
      @alanjameson8664 26 дней назад +9

      In typing class I was never able to get up to 60 words per minute, but the ones I could type the fastest on were the ones (perhaps like your mom's) which had the VERY short return lever and required raising the carriage to type capital letters. Whenever someone needed a typewriter elsewhere, they seemed to grab the one on my desk, so I had about every type available in the class---except for the electrics, which were very new (this was before the IBM Selectric) and in the back room, available for use only after we had finished our assignments. Olympias were generally considered the best---luxurious even. There were "silent" typewriters, but they were uncommon. My brother advised me to get a typewriter -*-without-*- letters on the keys, so I would HAVE to learn where they were. There was a key chart at the front of the class. A few years later, when I was at junior college, the JC decided to replace all its office typewriters and decided to do it with Olympias, which were one third the cost of IBM Selectrics. As for not being able to make corrections, that isn't so. One could use an erasing shield to get rid of a mistake, although care was necessary. The pencil-shaped erasers had a stiff brush at the other end, to clean the type, which becomes gunked up with continued use. Oh, and back in typewriter days, very few men could touch-type-- that was "women's work." If you see reporters typing in old movies, they are ususally "hunt-and-peck" typists.
      It would have been a great idea to learn shorthand also, but I didn't understand what a help it would have been in college, and no one gave me that advice. Again, that was "womens' work." I do not understand the method court reporters use, but it is/was very fact compared to conventional typing.

    • @alanjameson8664
      @alanjameson8664 26 дней назад +1

      Disregard the strike-out type--the strike-out was added by the Internet gods.

    • @theOlLineRebel
      @theOlLineRebel 26 дней назад +3

      Still have mom’s pink manual from the ‘50s, and my sister’s blue electric from the ‘70s. I loved them. Boy did I have fun just playing with them back then.

    • @pitsnipe5559
      @pitsnipe5559 25 дней назад +1

      My mom had a 1940’s vintage Underwood. My most vivid memory of it was when I used it to write a fake absentee excuse letter to cover my playing hooky. 😊 Wish I still had it, don’t know what ever happened to it.

  • @NDHFilms
    @NDHFilms 13 дней назад +4

    “I’m the boss, and the typewriter’s the employee; no arguments!” - Robert E. Howard

  • @YungStinkyWinky
    @YungStinkyWinky 15 дней назад +2

    Royal Quiet Deluxe 1956 user here. Heck yeah. This video gets it. No internet, no power, no distractions, no bologna. Just you and the keys.

  • @tomoth77
    @tomoth77 29 дней назад +154

    I typed my bar exam on an IBM Selectric. 30 years ago.

    • @supers0nic77
      @supers0nic77 23 дня назад

      Did you pass? That's awesome

    • @tomoth77
      @tomoth77 23 дня назад +1

      @@supers0nic77 sure did. 1st time.

    • @DG-kr8pt
      @DG-kr8pt 14 дней назад +1

      @@tomoth77 Are you done typing it yet?

    • @tomoth77
      @tomoth77 14 дней назад

      @@DG-kr8pt long gone is my selectric. I now type on a laptop.

  • @MarthaM4858
    @MarthaM4858 29 дней назад +527

    “what you said is what you said and nothing can change that” the kid has never had a bottle of white out 😂

    • @johnvanderploeg6707
      @johnvanderploeg6707 28 дней назад +66

      Or the type eraser.
      I had typing and bookkeeping course and we were able to back space, erase, use the brush end of the eraser to clear the page and correct our mistake.
      Realigning was a hassle, but no, any mistakes did not have to be permanent.

    • @MaxSolar-dd5wq
      @MaxSolar-dd5wq 28 дней назад +21

      Strangely enough I have used correction tape on some word processors, but just after I was interviewed I was made aware of manual correction tape by my English Teacher, but that doesn’t change the fact that it’s hard as heck to get ink off
      Also, you CAN use white out if you never want to load the document in the typewriter again

    • @MarthaM4858
      @MarthaM4858 28 дней назад +23

      @@MaxSolar-dd5wq the tip is to use the whiteout while the paper is in the typewriter

    • @MaxSolar-dd5wq
      @MaxSolar-dd5wq 28 дней назад +12

      @@MarthaM4858 That works in some circumstances, but sometimes you might miss an error until the paper is removed.
      Now that I think of it, the white tape actually could work pretty well, but still, the difficulty in editing what you write that makes the typewriter special, because if you want your document “perfect” you need to be careful

    • @MarthaM4858
      @MarthaM4858 28 дней назад +5

      @@MaxSolar-dd5wq I got my first typewriter as a high school graduation gift from my parents in 1976. I still have it so I know the ends and outs of using a typewriter. Besides if I make a big enough mistake that I can use correction tape or whiteout one I just put in a new page and start over.

  • @hopelessnerd6677
    @hopelessnerd6677 15 дней назад +3

    I love typewriters. I had one in high school. Little did I know how valuable typing class would be when computers showed up. I wanted an IBM selectric so bad I could taste it. Never got one.

  • @RosieIfYouKnowMe
    @RosieIfYouKnowMe 2 дня назад

    I have an antique typewriter and three kids who can't get enough of using it. I'm proud of these guys. ❤

  • @anb7408
    @anb7408 29 дней назад +129

    Still got my manual typewriter. And my typewriting class in high school became my most valuable class ever. I use the typing skills I learned every single day.

    • @ohana8535
      @ohana8535 26 дней назад +7

      Someone recently asked me how a blind person could possibly type on a computer keyboard. My stunned response was "Who looks at the keyboard when typing?" They were astounded to find out that you really could not look at typewriter keys and have any speed, because you were reading what was supposed to be written. Many times what you were reading was terrible handwriting. So yes, I use those skills too, and now that person is trying to learn how to type without looking at the keyboard.

    • @bite-sizedshorts9635
      @bite-sizedshorts9635 26 дней назад +2

      @@ohana8535 When I took typing, there came a time when the teacher replaced all the keys with blank keys.

    • @bite-sizedshorts9635
      @bite-sizedshorts9635 26 дней назад +6

      Back in 8th grade in the mid 1960s, when I was choosing courses for high school, my father looked at the list of courses and told me that of all the courses listed, typing was the only one I'd ever really use. This was way before computers. I took two years of typing. My last job before retirement was typing on a computer. I did that job for 18 years, so my father was correct.

    • @virginiamoss7045
      @virginiamoss7045 26 дней назад +2

      Same here! It got me my first job as well as my second and third before I got my career going which did not require typing. Twenty-five years later computers debuted and my muscle memory kicked right in while nearly everyone else struggled to hunt and peck.

    • @ohana8535
      @ohana8535 26 дней назад

      @@bite-sizedshorts9635 Exactly.

  • @annpaguntalan
    @annpaguntalan 7 дней назад

    Love this. My mom was a Typing teacher in the 1980s. She'll be happy to know that typewriters are having a comeback ❤❤❤❤❤

  • @DulceN
    @DulceN 23 дня назад

    I’m happy to see this. My daughter asked for her grandma’s typewriter when she passed in 2000, and the Olivetti I used in the 1970s is still in my mother’s home.

  • @12MapleLane
    @12MapleLane 25 дней назад +82

    Using carbon paper to make a copy. Typing at 3 a.m. for an 8 a.m. class. Furiously waving my hand to dry the Liquid Paper (thank you, Mrs. Nesmith). Those were the days.

    • @DG-kr8pt
      @DG-kr8pt 14 дней назад +1

      In college, I used to furiously wave my hand in front of my computer, then copy my friend file, change a few words/fonts, and submit it. Could do it all in 40 minutes, depending on how quick I finished.

    • @dan797
      @dan797 11 дней назад +2

      Liquid paper never dried. Lol

    • @ankavoskuilen1725
      @ankavoskuilen1725 10 дней назад +1

      And if you didn't have carbon paper, there was no way out: you had to type it twice.

    • @richardpetty9159
      @richardpetty9159 8 дней назад +1

      LOL. So familiar!
      My brother and I roomed together in college in ‘79-80 and it was a very familiar thing… the typewriter being pounded furiously in the middle of the night, hours before a morning class when a paper was due.

  • @kailee5694
    @kailee5694 25 дней назад +53

    Develops concentration and dexterity. Also love that typewriters don’t auto-change/correct what you are trying to say.

    • @u2bear377
      @u2bear377 14 дней назад +1

      Disable autocorrect.
      Switch off Wi-Fi / disconnect the patchcord.
      Uninstall Solitaire and Mahjongg.
      Voila.

    • @dragonsword7370
      @dragonsword7370 11 дней назад

      ​@u2bear377 you could even find a keyboard that is a good simulation of the old kind.(I think. I'll check that now because I'm rather curious)

    • @PURENT
      @PURENT 6 дней назад

      @@dragonsword7370 There's mechanical keyboards which are tactile and pleasing to use as they click pretty solidly.

  • @korab.23
    @korab.23 3 дня назад

    I have two... I love the feel of the keyboard. There's a physical sensation to typing and that tactile feedback makes it so satisfying.

  • @kaitiscarlett9022
    @kaitiscarlett9022 23 дня назад +2

    My college roommate used to complain about the sound of my typing. Admittedly, I did have a lot of papers to type. I can't exactly say that I miss the typewriter, but it's kind of neat that a new generation is learning about the way we used to do things.

  • @northernbettygirl
    @northernbettygirl 25 дней назад +105

    when I saw this, I cried. I'm 61, and I know the joy of typewriters. What a blessing this can be for young people so "controlled" by computers. Praise God to see this come back technology🙏🏼🥹

  • @88mmgamertank40
    @88mmgamertank40 Месяц назад +132

    I’m so happy typewriters are making a come back. I own four typewriters each one with the unique style lol.

  • @IntuitiveSugarSkull
    @IntuitiveSugarSkull 12 дней назад +1

    I've always loved the sound and feel of a typewriter, miss them..
    Thanks to my junior high for having us type 1hr a day back in the 90's. As boring as it was typing the same sentence, it was well worth it.
    Little did I know, that skill would help me earn a living working office jobs.

  • @cyclinggirl3212
    @cyclinggirl3212 11 дней назад +2

    Me too. Love it! Doesnt hurt your eyes and sounds beautiful.

  • @TheCanadianDude
    @TheCanadianDude 26 дней назад +193

    Best part, No on line government spying.

    • @Astrofrank
      @Astrofrank 25 дней назад +47

      No internet spying at all, also no malware.

    • @rdz-1776
      @rdz-1776 23 дня назад +21

      @@Astrofrankno of ads either lol

    • @cameronwright8634
      @cameronwright8634 23 дня назад +14

      And no hackers

    • @ZE_TRVTH_NVKE
      @ZE_TRVTH_NVKE 23 дня назад +12

      There are micro-particles in the paper and the ink that are used by the feds to discover your general location. The micro-particles' patterns, colors and shapes and orientations tell them in which state and by which company were the paper and ink manufactured and to which retailer were sold.

    • @jivanvasant
      @jivanvasant 22 дня назад

      True. Documents produced by manual typewriters are hacker proof. No small thing in this world of 24/7 surveillance.

  • @bakerwannabe4435
    @bakerwannabe4435 29 дней назад +45

    So cool! So happy for these students to experience analog devices. This is so much better for kids- no constant bombardment of ads and junk seeping in.

    • @mwatercress
      @mwatercress 29 дней назад +6

      I also think there is value in them learning the old ways of doing research before the advent of the search engine.

    • @dfirth224
      @dfirth224 29 дней назад +7

      @@mwatercress They will never know what searching through a card catalog at the library was like. :)

    • @mwatercress
      @mwatercress 29 дней назад +1

      @@dfirth224 Or figuring out what books to look in the index for a deeper dive.

  • @tomboyjessie1352
    @tomboyjessie1352 3 дня назад

    I don't use a typewriter, but it warms my heart to see children getting into something as old school as this. And they're right, as a fanfic writer, it's hard to get anything done because of distractions online.

  • @vaderladyl
    @vaderladyl 10 дней назад

    It is very satisfying seeing young people discovering typewriters and low tech.

  • @unlikelysuspect5491
    @unlikelysuspect5491 24 дня назад +28

    when you think about it, it makes a lot of sense. typewriters are verry tactile and satisfying to use, and the best part, NO ADS!!!

    • @DG-kr8pt
      @DG-kr8pt 14 дней назад

      if it caught on, there would be ads. Marketers follow eyeballs.

    • @thatonepossum5766
      @thatonepossum5766 9 дней назад +1

      @@DG-kr8pt how would they put ads on a typewriter? It’s non-electric. Stickers attached to the machine? 😅

    • @DG-kr8pt
      @DG-kr8pt 8 дней назад

      @@thatonepossum5766 Yes exactly. Branded typewriters, but if they were to do so now, would probably just be beard oils, deodorant, and beanies.

    • @PURENT
      @PURENT 6 дней назад

      @@thatonepossum5766 They would end up like printers where you have to buy branded ink and require an internet connection to use.

  • @davidpawson9047
    @davidpawson9047 29 дней назад +361

    This is excellent! Next up: teach them the secret code writing of cursive!

    • @johnvanderploeg6707
      @johnvanderploeg6707 28 дней назад +32

      No! We older folks are going to need some way to secretly communicate.
      Kind of like Morse Code for our generation.

    • @vadrifter3200
      @vadrifter3200 25 дней назад +27

      My mother has a typewriter that types in cursive.

    • @FourOf92000
      @FourOf92000 25 дней назад +27

      @johnvanderploeg6707 bad news: I taught myself cursive and I'm 23

    • @kensingtonwick
      @kensingtonwick 25 дней назад +7

      @@FourOf92000😂 made my day

    • @porkchopps
      @porkchopps 25 дней назад +25

      As someone born in the early 90s, the only time I have ever needed cursive is my signature. This amount of usage is in a world designed by boomers, the ones that love to shout "They don't know cursive." Have you thought about why we don't focus on cursive any more as something to teach? Because its obsolete, it will survive as a niche hobby and may see a revival in interest someday, but for now the exact people that claim kids don't know it are the exact same people that designed a world where its useless.

  • @tsonofjohnson489
    @tsonofjohnson489 15 дней назад

    Mrs. Judd was my freshman year Typing Teacher back in 1976. If she knew all this computer stuff today she would be Amazed! Good report!

  • @memahselfni
    @memahselfni 7 дней назад

    I had a couple of typewriters when I was a teenager in the 2010s. I absolutely loved them and miss them. I think as the world becomes more and more online, with things like subscriptions and WiFi connectivity to use anything on your computer, we’re going to see a gradual return to analog technology. There’s something neat about having the only copy of something in physical form. These days I dabble in photography, and I use old film cameras, plus develop the film myself and then take the negatives to the dark room for prints. I can bring a photo from conception to paper for others to enjoy without it ever being uploaded to a computer. Typewriters definitely give the same kind of satisfaction and I’m happy to see new generations discovering it for themselves.

  • @DD-uf2uo
    @DD-uf2uo 28 дней назад +227

    I'm an old man now, but when I was in high school (10th grade, 1970s) I decided to take one year of typing because it might come in good in the future. At least I would have some idea of how to type.
    No one (in school) even thought or knew about something called a desktop computer in the 1970s. So my decision back then paid off.
    Today, typing on a computer corrects misspelled words. So now, people don't have to think as much about spelling. We are dumber for it. Using a MANUAL type writer, it's up to you to learn how to spell correctly. I think this would be Good for the young generation. So if you have some kids in your family, you should consider getting them a MANUAL type writer. 👍
    .

    • @unoriginalname4321
      @unoriginalname4321 28 дней назад +20

      Spel cheking and autoekorrect hadnt make mee dumer!

    • @DD-uf2uo
      @DD-uf2uo 28 дней назад +8

      @@unoriginalname4321 👍

    • @NoName-ik2du
      @NoName-ik2du 27 дней назад +23

      Interesting counterpoint: I was a terrible speller as a kid, and relied heavily on spellcheck in Microsoft Word. I remember at the time thinking that I'd never learn to spell since I could just let the computer do the work for me.
      However, what ended up happening was every time a word was misspelled, since I had to click and and select the correct spelling, that _taught_ me how to spell all the words I didn't know. It was the equivalent of instant feedback from the teacher while the word was fresh in my head and I was primed to learn about it.
      The key factor there, though, may be that I grew up with early versions of spellcheck that made the user manually review what was wrong. This is different from autocorrect, which is constantly whirring away in the background and correcting things that users may often not even notice.

    • @DD-uf2uo
      @DD-uf2uo 27 дней назад +8

      @@NoName-ik2du 👍. Good information for an old goat like me. Thanks for the reply.
      PS. Just a side note. Kids and grown ups today can easily find information and how to do things on near anything with the press of a few buttons. Us Boomers didn't have that.
      There is good and bad in everything, but I really think there is more good than bad with the Internet.
      .

    • @brodriguez11000
      @brodriguez11000 26 дней назад +4

      @@DD-uf2uo Right, but the quality is often less. Back then our "internet" was the public library.

  • @johnvanderploeg6707
    @johnvanderploeg6707 28 дней назад +20

    My favorite was observing the die hard typists when first using a computer.
    No little 'ding' when coming to the end of your margin.
    No carriage return to bring it back to the other side of the page...

    • @MaryHughes-ko4fj
      @MaryHughes-ko4fj 25 дней назад +6

      As a trained typist, I struggled with word processing software (early 1990s) until I tried WordPerfect. The genius of that program was that the screen looked like a page! Made for a much easier transition to computers.

    • @steviebboy69
      @steviebboy69 21 день назад +1

      @@MaryHughes-ko4fj I remember in the 80's using a word processor called Easyscript, and that being for the Commodore 64. There was another one as well but I forget the name, and we would print it out at school. We also learned to type on the old Manual ones like above in the video and they had Electric and Electronic ones which were even better as you could fix errors.

    • @dragonsword7370
      @dragonsword7370 11 дней назад

      ​@@steviebboy69 I grew up using one of the electric powered models when I was around 10 to 13 years old. It was neat and filled the role it did for school papers, in the late '90's.

  • @techrescuestl
    @techrescuestl 11 дней назад +2

    EXCELLENT reporting and editing. Very very good job.

  • @TheAverycross
    @TheAverycross 16 дней назад

    That's pretty darn impressive! It really is and refreshing at the same time. It's as if those kids are traveling to a different time when they put their imaginations and vocabularies to the keys, Shift/Tab bars, and return lever. Especially in this day and age. Thanks for this great story!

  • @MarieForet
    @MarieForet 25 дней назад +44

    No company stealing your data, and selling it, or using it to target you with ads, and in many other unkown and sketchy ways... I'm so happy for these kids!

    • @tibbers3755
      @tibbers3755 24 дня назад +2

      What is there to steal? and what else is there to do with it? Not hating, comparing it to computers is like apples to oranges

    • @u2bear377
      @u2bear377 14 дней назад +3

      Get your computer off the line, that will do.

    • @louyou6614
      @louyou6614 14 дней назад +1

      ​@tibbers3755 Google doc had apparently changed their terms and conditions so they can use your text to train their ais
      So it quite a concern for a lot of writers

    • @KenKen-ui4ny
      @KenKen-ui4ny 12 дней назад

      @@u2bear377 True, turning off the internet connection in your computers WiFi settings when it's not in use, and just using an offline typing program like Microsoft word, is an other way to prevent some of the distractions as mentioned here. But with kids, you still got that temptation of getting on the internet, when they should be working on typing as a problem.

    • @KenKen-ui4ny
      @KenKen-ui4ny 12 дней назад

      @@u2bear377 That true. turning off the internet connection on your computer's wifi settings when it's not in use. And using an offline typing program, is another way of getting around some of problems mentioned in this video with computers. But with kids you still have the temptation of getting on the internet, when they should be working typing something as an issue.

  • @st67839
    @st67839 10 дней назад

    I love this! I remember typing my favorite book on my mom’s typewriter. I’m so glad these kids are taking an interest!

  • @rosepuff321
    @rosepuff321 23 дня назад

    This makes me nostalgic, I used to play with my great-grandmother’s typewriter when I was little.

  • @stephentroyer3831
    @stephentroyer3831 25 дней назад +17

    I spent a long time looking around for a laptop specifically for writing. Something that would start up quickly, have minimal to no distractions, and a screen that is easy on my eyes.
    Turns out, I was looking for a typewriter.
    No startup at all, it's always ready to go. No distractions. And nothing is easier on the eyes than ink on plain paper.

    • @wmd8840
      @wmd8840 10 дней назад

      Oddly enough, a device like you describe does exist, besides the typewriter. It’s called Freewrite. Has an e-ink screen, can only do word processing, and syncs your documents automatically to a computer for later editing. They’re expensive, but so were typewriters back in the day.

  • @bite-sizedshorts9635
    @bite-sizedshorts9635 26 дней назад +25

    I still have the portable typewriter I used in college. I bought it at a thrift store for $20 over 50 years ago. New ribbons are still available online. I own a re-inker machine and ink, so I can re-ink ribbons until the nylon material wears out.
    I have a number of typewriters, but one of my favorites was an electronic one by Brother. It had a tiny display that showed the last few letters typed, and it was a buffer before the letters were printed. This meant that if you made a mistake, and it was still on the display, you could correct it before it went to the paper. I could type many pages with zero typos.
    I still have my typing card from high school saying I can type 65 words per minute. That's net words after subtracting errors.

    • @JasmineSurrealVideos
      @JasmineSurrealVideos 19 дней назад +1

      I've just commented on the same Brother electric typewriter I had at uni lol😂

  • @ruleset
    @ruleset 11 дней назад +3

    I bet the classmates told the kid it's so pleasant to listen to him typing in class, it's so easy to focus

    • @BitTheByte
      @BitTheByte 7 дней назад +1

      As someone with ADHD, I promise the feeling is not universal ;^^

  • @DSHPerotecH
    @DSHPerotecH 7 дней назад

    I'm no longer "young" (31), but this is the same reason I recently got into film photography.
    It's so analog, I love it.

  • @mightytaiger3000
    @mightytaiger3000 25 дней назад +28

    What a sweet and encouraging report!
    To see that kids themselves are valuing their focus and interested in things that can help with that and be of use for 1 thing only, instead of 5.
    To know that small businesses and repairmen are still open and getting business for their expertise.
    To hear that schools and libraries and listening to kids and taking cues to encourage this wave of interest in typewriters, which will undoubtedly make kids more literate and skillful, and patient.
    It’s all very exciting and encouraging.

  • @Nyth63
    @Nyth63 29 дней назад +40

    I got an electric typewriter as a gift for college when I graduated from high school in 1981. I still have it. I could probably run it with a DeWalt battery and inverter.

  • @GaiaCarney
    @GaiaCarney 22 дня назад

    I love it! It makes me regret the loss of my old typewriter 🥺 These kids are on to something ⭐️

  • @Thoughtworld1984
    @Thoughtworld1984 10 дней назад

    I learned to type on an IBM Selectric. I am a hands on learner and thinker so I loved every minute of it.

  • @kolsen6330
    @kolsen6330 24 дня назад +11

    I am 70 yrs old and have the Royal that my mother used while in the Army Air Force during WW2. Still looks new and works great.

  • @virginiamoss7045
    @virginiamoss7045 26 дней назад +50

    Tom Hanks is a huge collector of old typewriters. I came across him, by himself, at an industrial park near that movie studio near interstate 85 and I-285 in north Atlanta about 20 years ago. There was a small little typewriter repair and sales shop in some warehouse space there. He was incredibly down to earth and was delighted to find something for his collection. He said he likes to check out places like that when he's away from home. We all, fortunately, treated him like any customer, any man on the street, and he was beyond lovely.

    • @mightytaiger3000
      @mightytaiger3000 25 дней назад +2

      He’s also a creep

    • @virginiamoss7045
      @virginiamoss7045 25 дней назад +8

      @@mightytaiger3000 How so?

    • @Ryan-wx1bi
      @Ryan-wx1bi 21 день назад +1

      Wonder if he used it on Epsteins island

    • @virginiamoss7045
      @virginiamoss7045 21 день назад

      @@Ryan-wx1bi Was he on a flight roster?

    • @gasparole
      @gasparole 19 дней назад

      @@mightytaiger3000 Elaborate please.

  • @ankavoskuilen1725
    @ankavoskuilen1725 10 дней назад

    When I was young, I had 2 typewriters. One I bought from my professor. It was a very large, extremely heavy thing from the fifties or even older. The older was a new, portable one. When I carried it around, I felt very sophisticated. 😊

  • @hyun-shik7327
    @hyun-shik7327 11 дней назад

    I’m in my early 20s and I love my typewriters. No distractions, ads, subscriptions (I’m looking at YOU Microsoft Office), or sudden inexplicable failures.

  • @goldwinger5434
    @goldwinger5434 28 дней назад +20

    I still have the typewriter I bought for college in 1976. It's a Sears model, made by Brother. I needed to type something not long ago and was surprised that the ribbon was still good.
    Using a typewriter forces you to thing about what you are writing because changing typed text is not an easy process.

  • @FiveBlackFootedFerrets
    @FiveBlackFootedFerrets 28 дней назад +16

    Best electric typewriter ever made by IBM. Impossible to jam the keys. The clickety clack noises that they made with a skilled typist came close to sounding like a teletype machine if you can remember what they are. The Selectrics were ubiquitous in the Air Force in the seventies. At least two on the desks in the administrative offices of every squadron.

    • @DecrepitBiden
      @DecrepitBiden 25 дней назад +1

      We still used them in the 90's in some squadron. I think CBPO slowly switched over to computer in the 80's. I got out in '99, & they were a dying breed.

    • @FiveBlackFootedFerrets
      @FiveBlackFootedFerrets 25 дней назад +1

      @@DecrepitBiden I separated from the Air Force two decades before you did. The only computers the Air Force had were IBM mainframes at that time.

  • @Namarigia
    @Namarigia 15 дней назад

    This is absolutely fantastic! I hope this catches on more.

  • @bettyc.parker-young1437
    @bettyc.parker-young1437 10 дней назад +1

    There is a personal connection with a typewriter. Very physical like playing a an instrument.

  • @UtubeH8tr
    @UtubeH8tr 29 дней назад +21

    Some times old tech holds it's merits even though the ages.

  • @takashitamagawa5881
    @takashitamagawa5881 24 дня назад +10

    As long as supplies (typewriter ribbons) and repair services are available, manual typewriters will continue to be with us. And that's a good thing.

    • @DG-kr8pt
      @DG-kr8pt 14 дней назад

      And thats a good thing. You must read a lot of news articles, and thats a good thing.

  • @JagadishTalluri
    @JagadishTalluri 14 дней назад

    Great and sensible comeback. I like this change, it is needed. It solves many issues. Happy for the young torchbearers who have the power to change the world.

  • @condortraveler7855
    @condortraveler7855 15 дней назад

    I love that it doesn’t suck up your soul but bring it up to light

  • @debbalinis
    @debbalinis 29 дней назад +57

    "I LOVE BREAD" 🍞 Best line in that whole interview lol

    • @gregb6469
      @gregb6469 25 дней назад +1

      Did she mean food, or the band?

    • @Cacowninja
      @Cacowninja 20 дней назад

      @@gregb6469 There's a band called bread?

  • @dangeary2134
    @dangeary2134 27 дней назад +19

    I used to service all types of office and business equipment.
    Good to see that it’s coming back.
    Now, all we need is mechanical cash registers to come back!
    They could run by a crank in a power failure!

  • @AidenRKrone
    @AidenRKrone 15 дней назад

    My grandmother bought me a manual typewriter when I was around 10 and I taught myself how to type on it! I used to type short stories and proto-fanfiction based on other books and television shows that I was watching at the time. I'm 27 now. Since then, I've had several laptops. My grandmother donated that typewriter to Goodwill long, long ago, but I still have a fond place in my heart for it.

  • @Sarah-bq7zo
    @Sarah-bq7zo 14 дней назад

    How fantastic the clack of the keys takes you back. I did business studies, computer studies and type writing in sixth form in the 80’s. Now what I learnt in business and computer studies has changed vastly but the touch typing skills have stayed with me and I appreciate the endless days of typing single letters endlessly and the aching hands. I used to be able to type 100’s of repetitive standard overdue account letters in a day all carbonised and from memory. I hope some of these great kids get some touch typing lessons and see how these machines can fly ❤

  • @deedoyle4069
    @deedoyle4069 29 дней назад +16

    WOW! THANK YOU FOR SHARING THIS!!!
    I grew up finally getting to USE a real typewriter. I got one of my own as a graduation gift from my parents! 1956. YEP. For Real! I SOOOO enjoyed it for a Bunch of years, till actually in the 1980s, computers came into my life. Computers are wonderful for many things, especially for my work.
    I'm a writer by profession. So computers eased up some of the slow-downs of typewriters.
    BUT the PRIVACY, Uninterrupted, on typewriter time....I DO miss THAT constantly *!*!*!*

    • @deedoyle4069
      @deedoyle4069 29 дней назад +4

      ....and it gives me great hope that young ones HAVE noticed AND are enjoying what it feels like to be ONE WITH YOUR WORK !!!

  • @user-cg2eb1gq7i
    @user-cg2eb1gq7i 25 дней назад +6

    My stepdaughter found our electric typewriter, asked what it was and spent hours on it, this was quite a few years ago now, I use the computer and shudder how my typing teacher would think about my typing today, she could spot an error at quite a distance, Mrs Weaver, you were amazing, thank you so much.

  • @NanciesArt11
    @NanciesArt11 22 дня назад

    I taught a young relative how to use a Smith Corona typewriter back in the 90's. He was the only child in his school who knew how to use one. I still had some of the ribbons up until 3 years ago. Sadly, I no longer have the typewriter. We supplemented his school studies with added subjects that they no longer teach in school. Thanks for sharing ☺🌟

  • @MissMCwuffles
    @MissMCwuffles 6 дней назад

    I recently bought a refurbished digital typewriter from the early 2000s for a similar reason. There’s no backlit screen nor distractions from the internet.

  • @-.._.-_...-_.._-..__..._.-.-.-
    @-.._.-_...-_.._-..__..._.-.-.- 28 дней назад +11

    Pen and paper also works.

    • @jonahwhite1306
      @jonahwhite1306 24 дня назад +3

      That is exactly what I was thinking. I sort of rolled my eyes at the thought of lugging a typewriter to school "because it is permanent." Bic plus spiralbound notebook seems about 100 times more practical.

  • @susanlevy2395
    @susanlevy2395 29 дней назад +14

    I wish I still had my mother's IBM Selectric. That is a beast!!!