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The IBM Selectric Composer
http://shapeofdays.typepad.com/ ^
| 9/10/2004
| Jeff Harrell
Posted on 09/10/2004 9:55:57 PM PDT by Catphish
click here to read article
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I didn't see this posted, and hope the blogger doesn't mind me posting it, so I posted an excerpt. Scroll down on the website to see all the text. The centering of the proportional text in the heading is a big key . . .
1
posted on
09/10/2004 9:55:57 PM PDT
by
Catphish
To: Catphish
Man, that middle signature looks like JFK
2
posted on
09/10/2004 9:59:06 PM PDT
by
formercalifornian
(Democrat platform: Hate, hate, hate, hate, tolerance, hate, hate, hate, hate)
To: Catphish
3
posted on
09/10/2004 9:59:47 PM PDT
by
Redcoat LI
("I am the great and powerful Kerry! Look at my medals!")
To: Catphish
>>>Could an IBM Selectric Composer have been used to produce these documents?
In theory, yes.
But the likelyhood of the TxANG having one to use to type memos to file is somewhere near the chances of me dating Ann Coulter.
4
posted on
09/10/2004 10:01:32 PM PDT
by
Keith in Iowa
("Oxymoron" is an oxymoron. Oxys=Sharp, keen + Moros=foolish --> moron = oxymoron.)
To: Catphish
How much did one of those puppies cost and could someone that did not type use one?
5
posted on
09/10/2004 10:01:38 PM PDT
by
Texasforever
(Kerry's new slogan "IT'S NOT THE STUPID CANDIDATE SO STOP SAYING THAT")
To: Texasforever
According to the site: "The machine sold for anywhere from $3,600 to $4,400 and fonts were extra and not cheap"
And remember this was in 1973 dollars.
6
posted on
09/10/2004 10:04:57 PM PDT
by
Catphish
To: Catphish
Someone posted an article that the font, Times New Roman, was not even copyrighted until the 80's.
If this was a civil court case, CBS would be settling.
7
posted on
09/10/2004 10:05:58 PM PDT
by
I still care
(Have you heard about the Democrat cocktail? It's ketchup with a chaser.)
To: Catphish
Yes, I found this site very interesting when I was just there looking at the articles. Very detailed analysis on how the IBM Selectric could probably NOT have been used to create the CBS documents. Also nice visual comparison of the varied CBS 'Killian' signatures vs the standard 'Killian' signatures on the genuine Bush documents.
8
posted on
09/10/2004 10:06:36 PM PDT
by
plushaye
(President Bush - Four more years! Thanks Swifties.)
To: Catphish
OK, that lays the IBM Composer issue to rest. The documents could not have been produced on one.
Finito.
To: Catphish
That's what I thought. I would bet my 401K that TANG had access to that machine.
10
posted on
09/10/2004 10:07:14 PM PDT
by
Texasforever
(Kerry's new slogan "IT'S NOT THE STUPID CANDIDATE SO STOP SAYING THAT")
To: Keith in Iowa
According to the site you could produce the superscript (but not easily and the odds it would line up with the CBS document are minuscule) and you could center it doing some math and with a ruler to measure. And then the letter spacing is still different.
Or you could just use Microsoft Word and produce a document that perfectly aligns with the CBS memo in a matter of minutes. . .
11
posted on
09/10/2004 10:10:12 PM PDT
by
Catphish
To: Catphish
FYI, Corvettes went for 5,500 in 1973.
12
posted on
09/10/2004 10:11:57 PM PDT
by
icwhatudo
(The rino borg...is resistance futile?)
To: Texasforever
"That's what I thought. I would bet my 401K that TANG had access to that machine."
So what are you suggesting here?
To: Catphish
Great article. This was my favorite line:
but rather on the twip level (1/1440th of an inch or 1/20th of a point).
I think we know who's on the twip level right now.
14
posted on
09/10/2004 10:13:23 PM PDT
by
formercalifornian
(Democrat platform: Hate, hate, hate, hate, tolerance, hate, hate, hate, hate)
To: Catphish
But the nagging question remained: Could an IBM Selectric Composer have been used to produce these documents?NO. PERIOD.
The ability to print proportional text is
not the same thing as being able to kern. The text of the CBS memos is kerned.
And it's kerned in a way only one item kerns: The current Windows version of Microsoft Word. Even the Mac version of Word would produce a slightly different document if the same words were typed into it.
The overlay of the MS Word documents over the CBS documents means case closed. There can be no other possibility.
15
posted on
09/10/2004 10:14:23 PM PDT
by
Dont Mention the War
(we use the ¡°ml maximize¡± command in Stata to obtain estimates of each aj , bj, and cm.)
To: blackbart.223
Dang I meant to say "did not".
16
posted on
09/10/2004 10:15:08 PM PDT
by
Texasforever
(Kerry's new slogan "IT'S NOT THE STUPID CANDIDATE SO STOP SAYING THAT")
To: Catphish
Well the idea that someone writing a CYA meno only for there own personal files with this kind of high end system (for 72)is a little outside the realm of logic
Normally if you creating a CYA memo you making a paper trail or diary to put you concerns down about something in case your ever called on it...normally there hand written or notes in a journal
17
posted on
09/10/2004 10:15:59 PM PDT
by
tophat9000
("Blackrock Bob" (aka DAN RATHER)....is in full denial)
To: Catphish
18
posted on
09/10/2004 10:17:14 PM PDT
by
fso301
To: Texasforever
"Dang I meant to say "did not"."I thought as much, but I wanted to hear it from you.
To: Catphish
Or you could just use Microsoft Word and produce a document that perfectly aligns with the CBS memo in a matter of minutes. . .AND my understanding is that that would be using the default Word settings. In other words, you don't have to play around with Word to get it to make the CBS memos, you simply type it out and print.
20
posted on
09/10/2004 10:23:23 PM PDT
by
PMCarey
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