Wednesday, 18 April 2012

Evolution of typewriter


The Evolution of the Typewriter  http://www.chevroncars.com/learn/history/the-evolution-of-the-typewriter

Old Typewriter
Kids today may go through life without ever seeing it. Yet without the typewriter, there would be no computer as we know it. The typewriter is the primate ancestor to the personal computer that we have made part of our lives. Did you ever wonder why computer keyboards have the strange layout that they have, with the QWERTY keys across the top left? The answer lies buried in decisions made more than a hundred years ago, when the typewriter first appeared on the plains of industry.
The typewriter is to the printing press much like the personal computer is to the mainframe computer. The European version of the printing press, known as the Gutenberg press, was first developed in the 15th century. It enabled books to be printed rapidly, and helped promote the spread of literacy (and religion) throughout the world. A personal printing press, or “type writer,” used by a single person to print a legible document dates to the early 18th century.
Old TypewriterSome of the forces spurring the development of a typewriter had to do with giving the blind the ability to write. An Italian is said to have built the first working typewriter for a blind Countess in 1808. Soon thereafter, a patent was issued for a machine where each letter was selected with a dial. It was neater, but even more cumbersome than writing. Many early typewriters resembled pin-cushions, with a forest of keys on a metal “typing ball” used to punch letters on a piece of paper hidden from the typist.
The need for speed and automation were driving forces in the further development of typewriters. So was the enthusiasm of early adopters. One of these was Mark Twain, who wrote to his brother in 1875:
“The machine has several virtues. I believe it will print faster than I can write. One may lean back in his chair & work it. It piles an awful stack of words on one page. It don’t muss [mess] things or scatter ink blots around. Of course it saves paper.”
Twain may have been trying out a Sholes and Gidden Typewriter, the brand name which gave us the generic term for the product. The Sholes also introduced the QWERTY keyboard. The placement of letters in this odd way was intended to prevent frequently struck keys from colliding; thus the E was next to the W and so on. As people became ever faster typists, this was an important consideration. The QWERTY keyboard also became popular because it was the first keyboard. Typewriter manufacturers that followed wanted to copy success.
The Sholes was actually bought and manufactured by E. Remington & Sons, a major industrial manufacturer already known for its guns and another industrial product that was changing the world - the sewing machine. Both products required the same machining and manufacturing skills that mass production of typewriters would require. Early Remington typewriters borrowed concepts from the sewing machine, like carriage returns by foot pedal!
The late 19th century saw continued product improvements. These included the carriage return, the self-rewinding ink ribbon, the shift key to distinguish between capital and small letters, and the ability to see what you were typing.
Electric TypewriterThe electric typewriter was conceived early in the typewriter development process. The first models appeared around the turn of the century, but they were not successful. It was not until the 1930s, when electricity was more common and IBM took over an early manufacturer, that the electric typewriter began to capture real market share. By the 1960s these machines had become ubiquitous in the corporate office. In a way, they marked a return to the original pin cushion style typewriter. A rotating ball with the keys on it was used to place the ink on paper. These balls were easy to replace. however, the electric typewriter like the manual typewriter was far from silent. The sound of keys hitting ribbon, paper and backing were one of the most memorable by-products of the age of the typewriter, the soundtrack to life in the office.
Electric Typewriter
This age came to an end - or one could say further evolved - with the coming of the personal computer. The electric became electronic, the physical became digital. A set of typewriter keys are pressed, but what is now recorded are bits and bytes that are saved on discs of all sorts, transmitted over great distances - and much easier than ever to correct. More recently, even the keyboard has become digital on mobile phones, as in the image above. Little did its inventors know where their keyboard would one day be found.
Typewriter on deskWhat has not changed, however, is the situation we face when trying to write something. A nice lamp, a comfortable chair in front of a table or desk are as desirable now as yesterday. Whether typewriter or laptop, the human challenge is the same - putting thoughts into words for someone else to read. Without literacy, there would be no type, real or digital.

How typewriters changed peoples lives


Website: http://objectofhistory.org/guide/changes/

Looking at Artifacts, Thinking about History

By Steven Lubar and Kathleen Kendrick

Artifacts reflect changes

Times change; history is the story of those changes. An artifact, or a collection of artifacts, can reflect change over time. Artifacts change as our society and culture change; artifacts nudge these changes along; and artifacts themselves change over time. Artifacts reflect changes, and sometimes cause change. They allow us opportunities to consider how and why society and culture change over time.
Think about some of the changes reflected by this typewriter, manufactured by E. Remington & Sons around 1875. It tells a story of innovations in technology and manufacturing. The adoption of the typewriter, at just the same time that women began to work in offices, reflected changes in women's roles, new ideas about the organization of work, and the rapidly growing corporations of the day. In turn, the typewriter brought about and helped to accelerate social change, opening up new jobs for women in the office.
  • Changes in Business and the Workplace. The typewriter, by reducing the time and expense involved in creating documents, encouraged the spread of systematic management. It allowed a system of communications that shaped the business world. While the typewriter wasn't responsible for opening the office world to women—the shortage of men during the Civil War and the increasing division of labor and specialization of office work played a bigger role—it did encourage the feminization of office work. In 1870, there were very few women office workers. In 1890, there were nearly 45,000, and 64 percent of stenographers and typists were women.
  • Social Changes. In the 1880s, when the typewriter was first adopted in many offices, America was a country in the throes of rapid change. The way in which the typewriter was adopted reflected changes in women's roles, new ideas about the organization of work, and the rapidly growing corporations of the day. In turn, the typewriter opened up many new jobs for women in the office.
  • Changes in People's Lives. Though it took a while for the typewriter to catch on, it quickly changed the lives of those who used it. Many working-class women saw office jobs as an escape from the drudgery of factory jobs. Office work was a step up in the class structure, a cleaner, higher-paying job. One novel described the changes in the life of a young woman when she got her first job as a typist.
  • Invention, Innovation and Obsolescence. Dozens of inventors had tried to invent a workable writing machine, but it wasn't until 1872 that the right combination of a clever mechanism, manufacturing expertise, and a growing market allowed the typewriter to become a commercial success. Christopher Latham Sholes, a Milwaukee printer, editor, and government bureaucrat, received his first typewriter patent in 1868, and two more in the next few years. Many inventors devised improvements for the typewriter, from the shift key in 1878 to the electric typewriter in 1920. In all, several thousand typewriter patents were granted. But by the 1980s, the typewriter had begun to disappear, overcome at first by the word processor and then by the personal computer, which could do everything the typewriter could do and much more.
  • Changes in Manufacturing. Christopher Sholes was unable to raise the money, successfully organize a factory, or find the skilled labor to produce his typewriter invention cheaply and in volume. In 1873 he sold his patent rights to E. Remington and Sons, manufacturers of guns and sewing machines, who had the technological skills to develop and manufacture the machines. The typewriter has numerous small precision parts. To make the machine cheaply enough to reach a large market, it had to be mass-produced. Remington and others soon developed ways to apply existing technology and techniques, including the "interchangeable parts" system, to the manufacture of the typewriter.