Electric Typewriter
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Here is a electric typewriter for your next office project.
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@rons said:
Here is a electric typewriter for your next office project.
Or possibly for your next time travel project.
-Gully
poster-Gully Foyle
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Every office I seen so far has at least one (from the east to west coast), so I did not travel to far back in time.
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Interesting, Ron. I work in a fairly large office environment for a fairly large corporation. I think the last typewriters around here disappeared around ten years ago, even though quite a few people still retain a surprising fondness for paper documents.
If I may ask, what are all these typrewriters used for?
-Gully
poster-Gully Foyle
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When you start to get out of the cities in the rural areas is where you start seeing the most. Although I seen allot of medical offices and even hospitals still using them in the cities. Here where I am in PA the bigger hospitals are just starting to go paperless. Even the office I work in has three of them. We use them for last minute entries on bid forms or if the server goes down. Seems that some people just do not trust technology or just will not change with the times.
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The use I've most seen (in a good 50% of architectural offices) is for mailing labels.
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I don't know about you guys but I find these old typewriters to be very usefull!
(my appologies Ron. Lovely model.)
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Well it does make a nice center arrangement.
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@tomsdesk said:
The use I've most seen (in a good 50% of architectural offices) is for mailing labels.
That is what we use ours for.
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@tomsdesk said:
The use I've most seen (in a good 50% of architectural offices) is for mailing labels.
How quaint. So then, word has not yet reached the architectural community that Avery and various other knockoff brands have been selling sheets of die-cut mailing labels for use in printers for the last twenty years or so? Also, there are these cunning little single-label printers you can get for around $40 if business is slow. Of course, they don't work unless you hook them up to a computer.
-Gully
poster-Gully Foyle
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A fat lot computers help if there is no power (as in power outage). Even though I consider an UPS as an intergral part most ppl don't. Even if you got a UPS on the setup, most ppl don't hook up their printers to it as it is generally non-essential. I got an old typewriter in my office, really just taking up space, but it is there if the need arises...
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I'm having trouble visualizing people sitting in the dark pounding away on typewriters, at least where I work. If the power goes out, we pretty much clear the building, and if it looks like it won't be restored quickly, we go home.
-Gully
Edit: By the way, JuJu, the title of this thread is Electric Typewriter.
poster-Gully Foyle
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lol, yeah Gully, thx for reminding me.
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Before I got a computer at home, my parents taught me how to type on their type writer. When we finally did get a computer (pentium 186 as I recall...) I still preferred to write on the typewriter, i much prefer the feeling and sound of typewriters, even though I can type 10x faster on a computer (plus this little backspace tool is great!)
Thanks for the model!
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Your computer has a backspace feature?! o_O
Just messing with you, also one of the things I appreciate most about working on a computer, the backspace and undo / redo functions rate amongst the highest with me.
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I don't see a need for the Backspace/Undo/Redo as I never make a mistake
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ORLY?!
If you say so...
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