Posted on 07/23/2014 7:09:30 PM PDT by Enterprise
Earlier in July, German politicians said they were considering going back to old-fashioned manual typewriters for confidential documents, in order to protect national secrets from American NSA spooks.
Patrick Sensburg, chair of the German parliaments inquiry into alleged NSA spying, said committee members are considering new security measures and are seriously thinking about abandoning email and returning to old school typewriters.
(Excerpt) Read more at rt.com ...
Typewriters can be hacked and monitored.
It’s a real chore typing a lengthy document, without making grammatical errors, mistakes or misspellings, and without leaving something out. And if something important is left out, you may have to type the whole thing over again.
Have my manual Smith-Corona I bought with graduation money in 1977. Doubt if a ribbon could be found for it, though. Are electric typewriters out of the question, or can they be compromised, too? We own a Brother one of those.
You may be able to find a ribbon on line.
How about just buying a computer with no internet connection?
Yeah, let them hack my manual typewriter. THAT would be funny.
you may find young people studying Gregs Shorthand along with entering typing contests.”
In one of my old scrapbooks my mom kept I found my typing award from 1955 - 70 wpm!!! I still find myself making notes in shorthand although, on occasion, I do have to stop and think about some of the characters for a minute. Hadn’t even heard anybody mention Gregg’s shorthand for many a year.
Last month, I bought 3 ribbons for my 1962 curvey Hermes 3000.
$6
You had to erase the typo and type it over.”
I remember when the original White Out came out. Somebody always forgot to screw the lid back on tightly and then it dried and you had to add thinner. Or you put too much on the paper and then had to blow on it to get it to dry. Sometimes the correction cover - like paint - would pop off and you could see the incorrect letter below. Had to be careful erasing errors on onionskin or you had a hole in the paper. We were so delighted when those white out strips came along. No more liquid to mess with. Interesting times.
Who knew, ribbon readers would make a comeback.
Yeah right. Unless there's a 7-foot tall goon standing over you with his arms crossed.
Here’s a bit of trivia: who invented Liquid Paper?
A Monkee’s mother: Bette Nesmith Graham
I still have my sleek, chic Olivetti portable from college in the mid-60s. It was considered a cutting edge Italian design back in those days.
“A Monkees mother: Bette Nesmith Graham
—
And I still use it——white kitchen floor,little dings, apply White-Out,poof—————ding gone.
.
Pretty neat article. I was thinking the other day how many “low tech” devices that have fallen out of use could find a role today.
Now, I admit I was thinking in terms of various “bug out”/SHTF scenarios at the time, so I was thinking more along the lines of carrier wave radios and mechanical computers. :) But the typewriter seems to be a very good example of an old tool finding new life in a real world situation.
I didn’t know that. Leave it up to a woman to invent it though. Don’t remember ever seeing a guy do any typing back then.
I do remember during the early 1980’s one of the secretaries in our office was going to be out for several weeks so the regional personnel office got a really great temp to fill in. Typed 120 wpm without error, super organized, had all kinds of awards from the secretarial school, etc. Only one problem it was a guy. My boss had a fit and fired him. Said “only a guy who was gay would even want to be a secretary”. Pretty funny looking back, particularly since many of us thought my boss was a closet gay.
Hint.
HF shortwave is very difficult to DF.
70wpm is quite good. Enough for a good job at that time. I have never gotten faster than 26 to 30 wpm mistake free. If typewriters become big again, I expect newer models will be a little quieter and more sensitive to touch. I still need a way to erase besides empting a bottle of white out every other day.
Well, there is a up side to all of this!
When the next crater is in a US city, our politicians, intell and law enforcement will have their excuse in pocket, blame Snowden.
Of course a failure to secure our Southern Border, deport those who over stayed Visas (which actually includes the terrorists of 9-11 but isn’t mentioned often), our managing of this threat as if it is a mere law enforcement function, our political correct approach that doesn’t focus on the actual demographic from where the threat emanates, our immigration policies that are allowing in hundreds of thousands that have a value system that is entirely incompatible with liberal Western society and our Constitution, not can they actually be vetted, THOSE MINOR DETAILS our politicians, intell folks and law enforcement won’t touch once the next hole in in a city somewhere!
You know, there was a time before we had a terrorist problem, and back then we didn’t have massive surveillance systems that fly in the face of the US Constitution, a 9 billion per year TSA that has caught zero terrorists...
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