Scotty: "Hello, computer!" Dr. Nichols: "Just use the keyboard" Scotty: "Keyboard. How quaint"
@thejudgmentalcat3 жыл бұрын
That was the most prophetic scene. Just substitute "computer" with "Alexa". We had no idea.
@milamber3193 жыл бұрын
Its him picking up the mouse to talk into it that makes me laugh lol
@tygrkhat40873 жыл бұрын
McCoy asks if giving Nichols the formula won't change history; Scotty replies that maybe he's the man who invented it. In the novelization of the movie, it's revealed that Nichols was the inventor of transparent aluminum.
@stantheman90723 жыл бұрын
@@tygrkhat4087 the movie was great, that novelization was seriously lame, but a lot of Star Trek books are weak sauce
Hearing echoes of James Burke and his Connections series here History Guy, and I mean that as a sincere compliment.
@61rampy653 жыл бұрын
Connections was an amazing show, I watched every episode. James Burke reminded me of a mad scientist sometimes when his hair was wild.
@frankenzion00013 жыл бұрын
I miss that show.
@anti-Russia-sigma3 жыл бұрын
I liked the shows.
@robertb34093 жыл бұрын
I love the Connections series. I still love to watch them. My favorite was the first series he did.
@Tampo-tiger3 жыл бұрын
@@61rampy65 Do you remember James Burke being the co-presenter of the British TV programme that accompanied the Apollo 11 landing on the moon? Its theme tune was Thus Spake Zarathustra (Alzo Spracht Zarathustra) by Richard Strauss, which as it had recently been used for The Dawn Of Man in Stanley Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey, was very appropriate and inspired. I will never see the moon landing without thinking of James Burke, Sir Patrick Moore and Strauss's fabulously dramatic piece of music. Play it loud on a really good hi-fi so you can feel those kettle drums.
@brucefay51263 жыл бұрын
I used to tell my students that the most important courses they could take were: typing, public speaking, and technical writing.
@christopherlynch33143 жыл бұрын
My parents twisted my arm to take a typing class in 8th grade. That was perhaps the biggest payoff of any single semester course throughout my educational career.
@navret17073 жыл бұрын
The most useful class I took in high school was typing. That was in the early ‘60’s (yes, .I’m that old) and thank it every day.
@lorensims48463 жыл бұрын
I took typing in high school because my dad said when he was in the army, because he knew how to type, he didn't have to go out on training exercises.
@GandolphTheGreyBeard3 жыл бұрын
Typing, later renamed, "Keyboarding" was a required course in my high school in order to graduate. That was in the 80s. Who knew that a tiny rural Iowa school was so cutting edge.
@RGC-gn2nm3 жыл бұрын
Mechanical drawing was mine
@FuzzyMarineVet3 жыл бұрын
This is why the clerks in the Marine Corps are called, "Remington Raiders."
@robertewalt77893 жыл бұрын
I was a clerk in the Army, early 1970’s. In the class teaching us to type, we also learned to “field strip” the machine, to clean or maintain it. But I don’t remember the brand.
@FuzzyMarineVet3 жыл бұрын
@@robertewalt7789 By the 1970s, US armed forces were using Olympic and IBM brand machines. Olympic for field use and IBM Selectric in the office settings. Those "light weight" Olympic machines were a b***h to hump! I was a field radio operator, and I also got to hump a typewriter when we were setting up a command post.
@mr.iforgot30623 жыл бұрын
I is too Batman. Cover today
@Satchmoeddie3 жыл бұрын
@@FuzzyMarineVet My uncle was Signal Corps Intel/Counter Intel and they used typewriters to take down Soviet coded radio messages. A lot of times they had to use equipment that was NOT affiliated with the US military in any way. Other times, Olympic or Royal. They would use Italian made Olivetti or German made AEG typewriters a lot. AEG had east German counter parts, so.... There was a good east block machine to use.
@FuzzyMarineVet3 жыл бұрын
@@Satchmoeddie Thanks for the 411.
@ImCarolB3 жыл бұрын
My grandmother, born in 1893, grew up in NYC's Lower East Side, after her parents emigrated from Austria. Her mother, a midwife, had wanted to be a doctor and encouraged her to do so, but Grandma wanted to be a secretary. She went to a "Normal School" after high school and was proud to make a "man's wage" as a secretary. After marriage, she taught secretarial skills at home, which helped greatly, especially during the great depression. I would spend a couple of weeks with her in the summer and she taught me (as a captive audience) how to type on her 1898 Underwood.
@marcsorensen29853 жыл бұрын
side note: there is only one U.S state that can be typed on one row of the qwerty keyboard, Alaska.
@pantherplatform3 жыл бұрын
So?
@WTFisupDennys3 жыл бұрын
@@pantherplatform dont be an ass.
@WTFisupDennys3 жыл бұрын
You can spell ass on one row also.
@alphagt623 жыл бұрын
It was my understanding, I can’t remember where I heard it, but the QWERTY keyboard was invented based on which letters were most used in the English language, the most used letters, ESRT, etc. are closer to the center, while ZX and Q are toward the edges. Making it faster to type by keeping most of your letters within reach of your two most used fingers. Lesser used letters near your pinky. And the space bar by your thumb. When I was in Junior High, I took typing. We had those exact Underwood typewriters seen at the 12 minute mark, manual typewriters. And who knows why, but the girls in the class could always type faster than the boys. Perhaps this is the real reason women gravitated towards typing jobs? They were simply better at it.
@musicom673 жыл бұрын
And you were the type to show-off 07734 on a calculator upside-down, eh? :-)
@EjaBe232 жыл бұрын
I was a history major (US post Civil War)-- I love history and how important it is!
@HMGarth3 жыл бұрын
I'm a Librarian. Born in 1962, learnt to touch type in high school on a manual typewriter -- thump, thump, thump, DING! Typed my university papers on an electric typewriter. I worked at a State Library from 1987 to 2019, through the birth of the keyboard-driven Internet and the World Wide Web, through the development of early cellphones to 2021 smartphones and tablets. They told us back in the late 1980s that we would become a paperless society. That hasn't happened and likely won't in our near futures. Too many aficionados of books and printed material. The QWERTY system is now deeply ingrained in us, and human nature is very comfortable with printed/visible words -- I cant see voice recognition replacing visible paper or screen use any time soon. Not in this century, at least 🤷♀️
@raydunakin3 жыл бұрын
For a short time when I was ten (1965) we had an old manual typewriter. I was fascinated by it, and came up with the idea to write a weekly "kid's newspaper". It was just one page of brief stories about some of the fun things my neighborhood friends and I were doing. It was tedious work because I didn't know how to type, so I had to hunt and peck with one finger. Also, the only way to make duplicates was to use carbon paper. I could put two pieces of carbon paper between three sheets of typing paper, and if I mashed the keys hard enough I could make one original and two legible copies. Then I'd have to repeat that process to make more copies. I sold these "newspapers" door to door for a nickel.
@Otokichi7863 жыл бұрын
I didn't learn touch typing back in middle school. (I am still a hunt-and-peck typist.) This was the early 1960's, so these were manual typewriters with great key feel that I gravitate to Lenovo ThinkPad computers, these days.;)
@bellarose65093 жыл бұрын
Great story!
@tyrssen13 жыл бұрын
Gads, I did the same thing! Later went on to cherish electric typewriters (and learned proper typing.) The best of 'em all, IMHO, was the ultra-heavy IBM Selectric.
@raydunakin3 жыл бұрын
@@tyrssen1 I took a typing course in high school and learned on the Selectric.
@texasgonzo673 жыл бұрын
@@tyrssen1 same for me... those things seemed capable of blistering speeds with their ball mechanism. I was born in the late 60's and took 1 semester of typing, which sadly is now referred to as keyboarding. Its absolutely a useful skill, and quite rewarding when you test around 120-140 wpm! Long live the Selectrics... especially the model 2 (my personal favorite). To the OP, yup... t'was a common thing back when we were responsible for entertaining ourselves, vs sitting for hours in front of whatever variant of the boob tube one is currently addicted to, soaking up whatever schlock and misinformation they feed us by the truckload. All the while we're dying needlessly of sloth... quite literally a deadly sin. Get off yer collective arses folks, start a newspaper or somethin. Lol. And fwiw, carbon paper is seriously handy stuff, I still keep some around the house! Not as easy to find locally as it once was of course, but surprisingly, its still available.
@_JimS3 жыл бұрын
My Father was a typewriter and adding machine repairman for many years, up till retirement in the early 90's. As a young boy I would watch him disassemble these machines of thousands of parts, clean adjust and reassemble them, it was quite fascinating to watch. He worked out of Cleveland/Akron Ohio for Remington Rand for quite a while. Great memories.
@anag16383 жыл бұрын
We had a twenty year old intern come into our office. He saw the IBM electric typewriter we still have (and still use occasionally) and he said, "What is that? It has a computer keyboard." We all suddenly felt very old.
@barbaraborgia32893 жыл бұрын
When you visit the home of the writer, Pearl Buck, you’ll see displayed the typewriter she used in China to write “The Good Earth.” The guide said that when school students see it, they ask where the printer is. 🤣
@BrilliantDesignOnline2 жыл бұрын
Ana- tell him to put his finger on the paper in the middle and you will show him how it works :-O
@MildMisanthropeMaybeMassive2 жыл бұрын
In the mid to late oughts I still used typewriters to do my homework in high school. I wasn’t some hipster. Many classes required our assignments to be typed. Sometimes we also had to print out extra copies for classmates to review and critique. My printer at home was broken, (it never worked 100% even when brand new) so I would save the assignments on a floppy disk (later USB drive) and take it to the school library to use their computer lab to print. But sometimes computers were often occupied sometimes by other kids just playing Runescape and Newgrounds Flash games. So I would take the never used IBM Selectrics to the same library and make photocopies. Eventually my home computer broke down, (well the keyboard did) and I used an Olympia SM5 manual typewriter from the 1960s to type my assignments. It was funny because around the same time I had a PC rig that could run the then state of the art Half-Life 2 and Doom 3 at max settings but I had to use a typewriter for schoolwork.
@AdmiralBison2 жыл бұрын
Should have just said it was an early prototype blue-tooth keyboard.
@digiprez773 жыл бұрын
My boss is a typewriter repair expert. He still gets calls once in a while, mostly from hipsters trying to fix machines they bought at yard sales or wherever. He moved on to copiers in the 80's when typewriters became obsolete, but he kept his stock of typewriter parts and he gets excited when somebody wants help with one.
@filanfyretracker3 жыл бұрын
Not surprised Remington was involved in this product, First they had an eye for diversified business but also just like a firearm a typewriter has lots of relatively small but at the same time fast moving parts that need to move with precise motions. A gun company had the perfect manufacturing experience for such a thing.
@disillusionedanglophile76803 жыл бұрын
Sewing machines too. Much of our technology today still relies on this type of metallurgy
@mikitz3 жыл бұрын
Only Thompson was the one to manufacture the Chicago typewriter.
@negativeindustrial3 жыл бұрын
Guns are necessarily and intentionally extremely simple mechanical devices. The Typewriter is nothing like a gun from a design perspective.
@disillusionedanglophile76803 жыл бұрын
@@negativeindustrial Materials science. Metallurgy from "guns" = metallurgy for sewing machines and metallurgy for typewriters. Let's start our design at molecular crystalline level.
@josephpostma17873 жыл бұрын
@@negativeindustrial Yes, but it's not easy dissembling and assembly a 1911 firearm.
@dougstubbs96373 жыл бұрын
Looking snazzy today, Lance. I did a typing course in the Army back in the Eighties, and learnt a little bit about the QWERTY. I had ten thumbs but still managed the forty five words a minute to pass, on a speedball. The instructor could achieve One Hundred and Seventy five and was mesmerising to watch. A little appreciated skill.
@GreenAppelPie3 жыл бұрын
175 is extremely impressive. My mom was really proud of her 120.
@goldgeologist53203 жыл бұрын
175 is stunning!
@RGC-gn2nm3 жыл бұрын
35 but my tab and center game is epic
@DavidKutzler3 жыл бұрын
I was drafted into the US Army in 1971. In the first week of basic training, our Drill Sergeant came into the bay and snarled "Can any of you maggots type?" A short, mousy soldier with thick glasses stammered that he could type 60 words per minute. From then on, his name was "Sixty words per minute." Every evening, when Drill Sergeant Smith had to type up his daily reports, he would snarl from the orderly room, "Sixty words per minute, get in here!" Sixty words per minute had to spend at least an hour every evening typing reports, but he did get out of KP and latrine duty.
@tygrkhat40873 жыл бұрын
@@GreenAppelPie My mom was somewhere around 100. I was supposed to get to 25WPM in my HS typing class, never got more than 22. I still passed.
@otpyrcralphpierre17423 жыл бұрын
I took a typing class in high school in the late 60's. An unexpected pleasure was that I was the only male in the class. Mom had a manual Underwood typewriter at home, so I could practice there, but I rarely did. I enjoyed writing, and that was my driving factor in learning how to type. The keyboard in the classroom was blank...no letters or numbers. There was a chart on the wall, but it was hidden during tests. We had to type from memory. I never exceeded 120 words per minute, and I type considerably slower now. Of course, I'm of the age that Everything I do now is considerably slower.
@michellelansky44903 жыл бұрын
To this day i still have drummed in my head.....A S, D F, J K, L;.....we made such fun of it but turned out to be a very practical skill.
@ubergeek19682 жыл бұрын
I would have failed that class. I am a fast typist, but my hands too big for the average keyboard and I have to use a fast "hunt and peck" method. I use only three fingers and my right thumb when I type and I manage 35+ wpm
@outdoorfreedom97782 жыл бұрын
I would have failed the class. Even in Junior High print shop my memory was so bad I was unable to memorize the Calif. Job Case used for type setting. My spelling was as bad as my memory so I would have used whiteout by the gallon. My wife used an old keyboard to teach me the alphabet and I would type fake letters until we got our first computer. A GateWay. Today I do ok but how I do things would have never been excepted in school!
@jessepollard71322 жыл бұрын
I learned on a manual - partly from my mom, and the rest from a typing class. But I didn't get very fast (16 words per minute, and I only passed the class due to imagination for the paper we were to write - I used blank verse rather than prose - and that got me a D- for the year, the teachers goal was 45 words per minute. I didn't get near that until I started keypunching computer cards for homework in programming, then when the center started providing some CRT terminals, I was told I reached 125 words per minute - when I knew what i wanted to type (conditionals in programming languages, some formulae, and in the use of functions and subroutine calls in FORTRAN). And like you, everything i do is a bit slower now.
@hankkingsley93002 жыл бұрын
You're better than I am I couldn't type without having the letters on the keyboard I mean I touch type but I still don't know where the hell everything is after 40 plus years I mean that's just sadistic if you make a mistake and you can't figure out what the hell key you're supposed to hit but I guess it's a moot point now because I use a lot of voice recognition and just clean stuff up at the end
@captainkeyboard10079 ай бұрын
As a typewriter, an old definition for a person who uses a typewriter as in typist, and a keyboard specialist, this story was made for me.⭐
@stevedietrich89363 жыл бұрын
Interesting video THG. Growing up in the 50s and 60s I remember some of those old typewriter models that you pictured, and I vividly recall the snagging of the keys if you tried to go too fast.
@jamesslick47902 жыл бұрын
@Lawofimprobability I see one NOW (I own a 1920s Underwood No. 4, LOL)
@rickmcdonald15572 жыл бұрын
Boy I enjoyed this video because I learned to type in High School in 1964 and I'm typing this in 2023 and NEVER KNEW about "QWERTY"~!!! Mr. History Guy you are a real Treasure to us all and thanks very much~!!!
@kevinblatter23693 жыл бұрын
It's good to hear you get really passionate about a topic. Thanks for sharing.
@ragman8053 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this! I repaired typewriters in the late 70's and early 80's. I didn't know that Remington typewriters originated with the man behind Remington arms! I just remember they were heavy but easy to repair! Never did learn how to touch type, but did pretty good with the two fingers one thumb, sometimes, method I used throughout my 911 dispatching career. I kind of miss the old IBM "Selectrics" Lol! Amazing how a "forgotten item" influenced modern living so much! I guess that's why I always enjoyed history!
@annteve3 жыл бұрын
Brilliant. I remember learning touch typing in high school (~1970). Repetitively typing the letters viz. aaa bbb ccc…to create what is now called muscle memory. Then, ‘the quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog’ all the letters of the alphabet. Then, there was an amazing moment in the process when you stopped typing individual letters -the letters merged into words- in a single motion. ‘The’, ‘then’, ‘were’, indeed all the prepositions and most verbs became a single ‘stroke’. and your fingers typed entire words without thinking. However, I was an indifferent typist and never broke 90 wpm. Loved this episode.
@richardmourdock27193 жыл бұрын
Brilliant.... this is why I love the History Guy. I'm 70 years old and often recall that the most important class I took in high school was "typing I". The teacher would require any student caught looking at the keys to his "dog house" where there were two typewriters with unlabeled keys. It was a tough way to learn, but since about 1967 I've been pounding keyboards at 60 wpm.... thanks to practice, practice, practice and the evolution from manual to electronic typewriters and now of course, desk top and lap top and even phones... though I love the swipe feature on my Samsung!
@dlvqaz3 жыл бұрын
I have been a computer teacher in an elementary/middle school for the past 25 years. I still teach keyboarding, starting in kindergarten. I have always given a short introductory talk about the QWERTY keyboard at the beginning of my introductory typing lesson. I will be using this video starting in August 2021 when we return to school. Please keep up the good work. Thanks for your content.
@joelk96033 жыл бұрын
At age 10 (1960), my parents noticed me hunting and pecking on the manual typewriter in our home. They were both were accomplished typists, and said that I could use the typewriter under either of two conditions: 1) You are learning and practicing how to touch type, or 2) You already know how to touch type. My Dad handed gave me a Smith-Corona touch typing course book and said "Get started". By the time I was in 8th grade I could type 86 WPM. My four siblings followed suit, and it became a competition for the top typing speed. Learning the QWERTY keyboard was one of the most important skills I ever picked up.
@tygrkhat40873 жыл бұрын
My mother learned typing and stenographic skills in high school. She hadn't even graduated when she got her first job, a secretary at General Mills. A couple years after that, she met my dad, who worked in the cereal lab. After they married, she left the Big G and dad worked there for nearly forty years. Mom later took her skills to Marine Midland Bank, later called HSBC.
@jessepollard71322 жыл бұрын
My mother took her skills to the Pentagon, as part of the first group to move in (human resources - she said she always knew where dad was going to be assigned before dad did).
@sparky60863 жыл бұрын
When people who remember manual typewriters ask me why their computer freezes up or otherwise needs to be reset, I tell them what in effect happened was the computer jammed up, like how their old manual typewriter would jam, when they would accidentally hit more than one key at the same time resulting in the the type levers jamming together and had to be separated or unjammed by hand. When both their computer and manual typewriters found themselves in a situation, which they didn't plan or were designed to get into, they can't figure how to get out of it, without human intervention.
@GreenAppelPie3 жыл бұрын
An old computer will miss keys pressed too fast but it would never crash it.
@sparky60863 жыл бұрын
@@GreenAppelPie You misunderstand. The computer side of the analogy concerns unintended situations in it's programming or use, not inadvertantly hitting more than one key at time.
@HootOwl5133 жыл бұрын
Old Royal thumpers like me, have muscle memory to hammer the type keys so they would read legibly thru multiple carbons. Sometimes this is too hard for an electronic keyboard. Usually happens when I'm typing something long and try to get lyrical with my prose.
@kristensorensen22193 жыл бұрын
I turned 65 this month and we had typing classes in Jr high school when manual typewriters were still the norm. Within 4 years we had IBM electrics with the ball that replaced the old style system. Same keyboards as my phone. Real history!💝
@travisdlucas3 жыл бұрын
I love learning the history of things that are so common in our everyday life. Thank you for the fantastic content.
@musicom673 жыл бұрын
Will he teach us the history of the tampon, too? Love to hear THAT introduction from THG.
@prismstudios0013 жыл бұрын
The more i type, the more impressed I amwith the brilliant and intuitive layout of the QWERTY keys. Thanks for the story!
@frankgulla23353 жыл бұрын
Fascinating. You do tell the darndest stories.
@ireuel3572 жыл бұрын
Enthusiasm for history is contagious. 🙂
@mikekantor4533 жыл бұрын
Very interesting video that really hit home with me. I went to a technical school in the mid 70's to learn how to repair typewriters and landed my first job in 1978 as a typewriter mechanic working for the Smith Corona typewriter company. (SCM) I spent many years as a typewriter mechanic and have worked on every make of typewriter at one time or another including all of the IBM typewriters including the Selectric series, and also Royal, Remington, Olivetti, Olympia and many others. Thanks for making this video! Brought back a lot of memories.
@quillmaurer65633 жыл бұрын
I own a couple old typewriters, including a basically mint Smith-Corona portable of I'm guessing around 1959 vintage I bought for $10 in a thrift store (I wouldn't be surprised if it's worth at least a hundred), have used it on occasion to write letters, even a few school assignments. As someone who grew up in the digital age, I find it fascinating to see how it's design influenced the arrangement and function of modern computer keyboards, answering questions I'd never thought to ask. The "Shift" key shifts the entire mechanism up to use a different part of each type bar, and the "shift lock" key, predecessor to modern "caps lock," mechanically locks down the shift key. The reason for the key arrangement feels fairly obvious - it's to put letters commonly used together on opposite sides, so that type bars would be less likely to interfere with each other. One "mistake" in this arrangement is "T" and "H" - those are used all the time, in fact I see 19 of that combination so far in this comment. Those two frequently jam. Typing with it is certainly slower and far more effort than a modern keyboard, but once I get the hang of it it's far faster and easier - not to mention more legible - than handwriting.
@judyjones50892 жыл бұрын
Being blind and growing up in the 50s and 60s, grade-school blind kids learned to touch type, in order to turn in homework to sighted teachers. My husband and I, being military BRATS, learned at different times. We still have two typewriters, and will never get rid of them, anymore than a sighted person would do without a pen. We own, not only our tried and true slates and Perkins braillers, but also have a working Selectric II, and a Hermes manual typewriter, left over from college days. You can still buy ribbons and accessories through Amazon, and the typewriter still has its use at our house, even though we are both proficient in using today's keyboards. Long live these machine!
@IceManTX693 жыл бұрын
I love the passion in your delivery. It's infectious.
@TheLordblackader3 жыл бұрын
Reasonable and usable voice recongnition exists today. For people like myself, I can type quicker than can speak. Until that variable changes, the QWERTY keyboard has many years ahead of it.
@tangydiesel18863 жыл бұрын
This!
@jliller3 жыл бұрын
The other problem with voice recognition software for transcribing is that it is difficult getting used to talking to yourself aloud.
@toomanyuserids3 жыл бұрын
I can type faster than I can correct the crap translation of what I said.
@JohnDoe-pv2iu3 жыл бұрын
And all equipment fails up from time to time and the manual input will be a keyboard...
@raydunakin3 жыл бұрын
Also, there will always be circumstances when voice recognition isn't possible. For instance, people who are vocally handicapped need manual input. And then there are the situations where vocal input would be impractical. Can you imagine a busy office where everyone is dictating out loud to their computers at the same time?
@mikeumm3 жыл бұрын
Best channel on KZbin, hands down.
@Cneq3 жыл бұрын
Bachelor of I.T student here, this was mentioned in one sentence in a text lecture and not even in class, thankfully there's channels such as this that cover things that even Universities don't believe are worth being remembered lol Keep up the great work.
@texanfournow3 жыл бұрын
A piece on the fastest typist of them all, Cortez Peters, would be interesting. He could type more than 300 words per minute--even with mittens on his hands! He also sold a typing instruction curriculum that I used to teach to my students in the 1980s.
@karenhaller99883 жыл бұрын
Dear Strong Bad, how do you type with mittens on your hands?
@texanfournow3 жыл бұрын
@@karenhaller9988 Very carefully.
@texanfournow3 жыл бұрын
@tradde11 I topped out at 100/minute. I had one student who could beat me--and she was blind in one eye! Now I have carpal tunnel and would be lucky to hit 60/minute...
@jkcarroll3 жыл бұрын
As a side note: a few years back there was a competition: who could send more information faster: someone using telegraphy (where you have to type the message as you receive it) or someone using texting. Telegraphy won hands down.
@PBryanMcMillin3 жыл бұрын
Oh, I can type 300 words per minute. That number drops significantly if you want them spelled correctly.
@michaeljohnson10573 жыл бұрын
Once again...a story that entertains and educates. Why 28 people didn't like this amazes me.
@williamevans57823 жыл бұрын
I had a friend in the 80's, who was so unhappy with his qwerty computer keyboard, he was manually rewiring it to what he wanted. He never really completed it, because when I saw him in 2019, he still had it wrapped up on his work bench. I wonder if there is anything to the thought that the current configuration forces us to use both sides of our brain, and that usage makes learning to type easier? Nice one. Thanks.
@travcollier3 жыл бұрын
I have numerous friends who use Dvorak... A little bit better for someone who types all the time, but really not much and just doesn't matter if you aren't typing for hours and hours a day. QWERTY is fine, and I'm very locked into to it (I do a lot of programming and use vi).
@ELCADAROSA3 жыл бұрын
There is a pseudo-museum of typewriters here in Wilmington, DE. Its located within a legal office firm. The founder/principal of the business collected them. I haven't been in there in years, but it was quite a collection!
@patricksanders8583 жыл бұрын
When I was in middle school ('80) I took a typing class. The teacher was an "older" woman and she was amused that I wanted to learn to type. I dont think she knew anything about computers and the keyboards. Today every child learns how to "type".
@briandeschene8424 Жыл бұрын
Same year for me was high school. Took typing for same reason: Commodore PET computers. Only guy in a typing class with 19 girls. Good times!
@jimdavis6833 Жыл бұрын
My brother took typing in the early 60s. I don't know why your teacher would be amused 20 years later. Lots of guys have taken typing classes. I didn't, but sure wish I had. I'm a two fingered terror. I even knew guys in the late 50s who took Home Economics. I think back then it was mainly to hang around the girls.
@JWSitterley3 жыл бұрын
What an absolutely delightful and fascinating piece of history...Qwerty. Thank you History Guy. I can see now that I'll have to pull out my Mom's 1936 portable typewriter from storage and give it a more prestigious display in the house. :-)
@samuelgibson7803 жыл бұрын
Thanks for this awesome channel! It's one of the best on KZbin. Typing and coding have been part of my life since highschool and I didn't even realize how much I wanted to see this video.
@jaygreider47533 жыл бұрын
What a good video. I took typewriting in HS because I didn't want to go to whatever class. I then went into the US Navy and was made a radioman - morse code and ship-to-ship, ship-to-shore teletype. When I got out of the Navy I was typing 75wpm. Did all my college papers on a manual typewriter - getting fingers blacked trying to correct the ribbon. QWERTY!!! And the right hand is {POIU. The set up is - left hand - ASDF. The right - JKL;.
@kathyo18112 жыл бұрын
Thanks for all the wonderful research you do to be able to present such a cool video.
@profharveyherrera3 жыл бұрын
I remember using a typing machine in highschool, it used to jam when I wrote fast. Qwerty keyboard may be more efficient in English but not so in other languages. Excellent video, I love your passion for history telling!
@hungrysoles3 жыл бұрын
I had a great-great aunt who was a typist for the Remington Typewriter Company in Paris when World War I was declared in 1914.
@irenebecker48153 жыл бұрын
Besides the fact this came out on my birthday (thank you), I have never seen HG so animated and excited. But I can see why. This was an invention that has become entrenched around the world, and yet we never thought about it. Thanks for this one!
@piltdownman21513 жыл бұрын
QWERTY will remain. I can’t imagine being in an cube farm with everyone talking at once, it would be maddening.
@Sithdude783 жыл бұрын
Also would be a nightmare for healthcare with HIPAA.
@joesterling42993 жыл бұрын
Yeah, talking to computers has its place, but it isn't going to make typing obsolete.
@clearsmashdrop58293 жыл бұрын
Ha, I just said the same thing and saw this comment 30 seconds later.
@LegoBob41233 жыл бұрын
Put everyone in their own soundproof box
@K1lostream3 жыл бұрын
Maybe they'll invent a hat you just put on and you can think the words onto the screen! Just don't think of titties! :p
@assessor12763 жыл бұрын
I completely agree with you that the QWERTY keyboard has been transformational. It brought the written word to the English-speaking world with a degree of speed and legibility (by supplanting handwriting) that has brought about countless other innovations and societal developments.
@tyrssen13 жыл бұрын
The typing class I took back in high school, just to fill up that half-hour of my schedule, turned out to be the most useful thing I ever did in school.
@nurmaybooba3 жыл бұрын
I am a weird person since I walk around the house at times marveling at the easy to use items I have just in the house care/cooking. The internet is a magical place since it provides me with my window to the world.
@jeffnewcomb6013 жыл бұрын
It would be an immense undertaking, but the thought occurred to me that it might be quite popular for you to have a "You were born today, and it's a date that deserves to be remembered." 365 shorts that cover interesting things that happened on this day in history...
@tomkelly68333 жыл бұрын
Thank you History Guy, as always learning the history is so important. My Mom was a fantastic typist. I will always remember when I was growing up that when a new and improved type writer would come to market how excited she would be.
@truckladders41043 жыл бұрын
Great Video My mom was a field reporter to a regional newspaper She covered a small town and county If there was a fire or event she had until 3.0 am to send the article and her photos. We would go to the fire with her in our PJs Once she had the article and photos we would rush back to the house to type it out I can still hear the sound of the keys of her Underwood as she pounded out the story The distinct ring of the bell at the end of the carriage Her hands flew across the key board. If Roy the courier got the article and the photos in by 4. They could make the morning addition at 7.0 Her work Was so good it would go right to the press room. Some of her work was picked up by the UP and went around North America particularly her photographs Unfortunately to get equal pay she worked under a “Ghost Name” that she made up that sounded like a man. She had a wall of awards but was never recognized She retired when then the newspaper bought her a new IBM Selectric “too quiet “!
@dbmail5453 жыл бұрын
I had always wondered what was the relationship between Remington Arms and Remington typewriters. The gunmaker L.C.Smith was the parent company of Smith-Corona.
@mikeumm3 жыл бұрын
The sewing machine company Singer, made guns for a while during WWII. The Singer Thompson sub machine gun is a pretty sought after collectable.
@HootOwl5133 жыл бұрын
@@mikeumm Singer M1911A1s in .45ACP are also at a premium.
@thomasblanchard67782 жыл бұрын
So there's the hidden meaning of "firing off a reply"!
@1locust12 жыл бұрын
The IBM Selectric must have felt like a piece of heaven had fallen out of the sky. No more jammed keys!
@rickparsley35982 жыл бұрын
IBM made a fortune with their electric typewriter that was manufactured in Lexington Kentucky where I lived and sold professional video equipment they had a very elaborate cctv human factors lab to analyze how their machines were being used and how good were their instructions manuals at being effective information that was being understood.
@jeffsutherland16022 жыл бұрын
There was a reason IBM had almost 90% of the electric typewriter market at one point and it wasn't because of that funny little ball with the typefaces on it. The keyboard on a Selectric typewriter was absolutely brilliant. When IBM came out with the IBM PC in 1982 they carried the same human factors over to the design of the keyboard for their computer. The "buckling spring" keyboards are just amazing to use. Over the years every other computer I owned since I equipped with an IBM keyboard, I even have a couple NOS in original packaging unused against the day when I might need to replace one of my beloved keyboards. Yet not one key on any of them has ever failed. These were from a time when we still knew how to make stuff in the USA...
@mrcryptozoic8172 жыл бұрын
@@jeffsutherland1602 Even now, the touch sensitivity of a full keyboard is exactly the pressure and rebound pressure that IBM developed when the Selectric was in production. Keyboards which don't have that sensitivity are much harder to use.
@Backyardinstallers3 жыл бұрын
Love listening in the morning on my way to the office, better than today's news and that's history to be remembered
@pythongunner3 жыл бұрын
I live in Milwaukee Wisconsin and a number of years ago i got a job as a carriage driver another driver showed me a route that took me and my passengers past Mr. Sholes house
@josephgaviota3 жыл бұрын
I suppose there wouldn't be enough interest, but it might be interesting to see how the Linotype machine helped automate typesetting, and its own keyboard ETAOIN ... specifically designed to maximize the letter matrices being returned to the magazine.
@matthewpoplawski87403 жыл бұрын
josephgaviota, you sound like an old printer.At the Charleston Museum, there is an old STILL WORKING Linotype machine on display. When I was working at THE POST AND COURIER (Charleston, S.C.;I was an offset pressman for 32 years), the older men who were there would talk about what they called THE HOT TYPE DAYS.💪💪💪✌✌✌✌
@HootOwl5133 жыл бұрын
When I was in journalism school, we were taught to insert ETAOIN SHERDLU in a space which we were to later correct with the right name, once we found it out. Also I was told the QWERTY configuration came about as copied from the cases of type sets hand typesetters used. Individual letters set in bins were pulled by printers and composed line-by-line [backwards &reversed] to set the type. A paragraph was set in a block and compose in a frame, galley by galley, and a page was set and clamped in a frame. Then inked and pressed. Kind of why most small town daily periodicals only ran about 4 - 6 pages. Linotype changed that. The printer sat at a machine, typed the line, a row of letters appeared in a jig, and hot lead filled it in, making one line of type called a ''slug''.
@dbmail5453 жыл бұрын
@@HootOwl513 isn't this the origin of the expression "mind your P's and Q's" which came from, lower case p's and q's being inverses of each other?
@HootOwl5133 жыл бұрын
@@dbmail545 I never thought of that, but it sounds about right. A young ''Printer's Devil'' [apprentice] would have to be extra careful when selecting both those letters [with a tweezers in fine points] since they look so much like each other in reverse. I also wondered why the Brits used a lower case d for Pence, instead of p?
@HootOwl5133 жыл бұрын
@@colinward3268 Interesting.
@davidwise13023 жыл бұрын
The Hanson Writing Ball. So that's what I saw on display in the Deutsches Museum in München -- fascinating place to spend the afternoon. Or at least the upper "keyboard" part of what your graphic showed.
@Ron-zr6se3 жыл бұрын
When I was a kid I had a manual typewriter and then IBM came out with the IBM Selectric. That was a dream machine but way too expensive. Watching the ball spin around to type each letter was amazing.
@VictorianTimeTraveler3 жыл бұрын
Everytime I type a nasty comment to troll people I always pause and remember how grateful I am to the inventors that made this possible ( joking aside I love your channel immensely)
@michaelfaklis81693 жыл бұрын
The QWERTY keyboard was engineered to solve the problem on manual typewriters of keys getting stuck when the impression arms collide. As we drifted away from manual typewriters, the QWERTY keyboard isn't the most efficient keyboard layout, but it is the most familiar keyboard. I remember a study declaring the Dvorak was more efficient English language keyboard based on finger movement. An analogy might be guitar tuning. We are taught standard tuning being EADGBE. Many guitarists have learned alternate tunings (i.e., DADGAD, DADGAD, CGDGBE, and others) which allow more comfortable finger patterns. I find DADGAD is very useful playing blues.
@johnhooper18433 жыл бұрын
I worked for a State government agency that tried several times to introduce voice recognition software for field workers, thinking it would spped up and simplify lengthy reports. It has not worked out to this date.
@ElectroDFW3 жыл бұрын
That's because most people don't have the time or patience to learn how to talk to a computer to get the V.R. to understand them and work properly. That, and the gov probably isn't using the best (read 'expensive') V.R. software out there.
@alec3492272 жыл бұрын
Over 1mil subscribers!! Iv been watching you since you first started. Congrats man! Definitely one of the best history channels ever. Love your content
@dankolar60663 жыл бұрын
The high school that I attended was so small that one had to take, and pass, all offered classes-including typing, wood-shop and driver's education. However, as a visually-impaired person, I nearly failed all three. Ironically, I spent decades working at a keyboard, kept a home wood-shop and earned a driver's license. The later two accomplishments tended to freak out insurers.
@bob-ny6kn3 жыл бұрын
I am glad you failed driving, or the system would be flawed... oh, wait!
@dankolar60663 жыл бұрын
@@bob-ny6kn - Respectfully, I did pass driver's ed, shop and typing. Else, I wouldn't have been handed a diploma. Altho I pass all these classes, the grades were not stellar. Likewise, I also passed the DMV drive test. Nevertheless, I didn't drive. In the old days, before state id cards, you had to offer a driver's license as proof of identity. It was a more undeveloped, and stranger, time. Not better, just different.
@bob-ny6kn3 жыл бұрын
@@dankolar6066 you are fine, it is the system that licenses "blind" and drivers like my father on the road. It is a murder scene out there with "normal" people lowering one-ton(ne) murder weapons. Laws must be stricter, restrictions more permanent or even more innocent drivers and passengers will be murdered. I have decades of perfect driving, but HUNDREDS of times I should have been dead - due to incapable drivers - and my ability to recognize the poor driver, exercising their "right." It's not.
@patrickclawson96223 жыл бұрын
Among those of us in the Typosphere, today is World Typewriter Day, because of the U.S. Patent date. Ongoing pandemic concerns have prevented the annual, week-long exhibit with my own collection, many of which are Remingtons. It is amazing how many college students are fascinated by this not-yet-forgotten, historical technology.
@chiron14pl3 жыл бұрын
One of the best things my parents did for me was pay for an additional typing class in the summer between 8th and 9th grade, having had a basic typing class in 8th grade. That extra training made me fluent with the typewriter which facilitated my academic endeavors.
@patrickchambers59993 жыл бұрын
In 1962 I was going to a vocational high school and wanted to take a one semester typing course as an additional elective. I was told I needed to also take two other courses - 10 key adding machines and operating and using a mimeograph machine. I showed them I could use a 10 key adding machine that I had learned having a paper route for the prior 4 years and I could make and mount a stencil, and operate a mimeograph machine having learned to do it in 7th and 8th grade. Remember 10 key adding machines, stencils, and mimeo machines? Still was denied the course as that grouping oft courses was standard and no other options available. So at 74 I'm still a hunt and peck typist.
@tygrkhat40873 жыл бұрын
@@patrickchambers5999 Ah, the smell of fresh mimeograph.
@patrickchambers59993 жыл бұрын
@@tygrkhat4087 Mimeo's smelled like ink. The smell of hectograph (spirit duplicator) copies was better, especially in a small area.
@tnate60043 жыл бұрын
In addition to typing, I wish I had taken shorthand in high school. Would have made taking notes in college much easier.
@chiron14pl3 жыл бұрын
@@tnate6004 My father paid for a few lessons from a stenographer, but I didn't stick with it. I should have, it would have made note taking so much easier as you noted.
@thomasschwartz5553 жыл бұрын
Burt! I just heard of this guy in the History of the Earth series. What an awesome connection! Wow! I am hooked.
@PlanetEarth31413 жыл бұрын
My first personal typewriter was Corona. But the first time I ever typed was in college on a teletype formerly belonging to the army. It also had a paper tape mechanism on the left side to punch a three hole combination of large or small holes into the folded, stiff, paper tape. That could be fed later into a computer as a primitive, Morse code kinda programming. A hodgepodge of ideas all rolled up together for the modern army. Lol. Then I decided to take a typing course. My teacher demonstrated a typing speed of 235 wpm, but it was a relatively simple paragraph of about 100 words. Took about twenty seconds or so. We thought she was joking till she passed it out to the class. It was perfect.
@Oddman1980 Жыл бұрын
As someone who has a beautiful 1968 Sears Cutlass and a dusty 1910's L.C.C Smith & Corona typewriter, I love this video.
@reallyseriously70202 жыл бұрын
I love your enthusiasm! It always makes me smile.
@libertyandjustus82583 жыл бұрын
💗 love the new, fresh energy you are projecting on this channel! I think it will appeal to a broader audience and get them interested in history. As for me, history will always be my favorite subject for who "they" were affects who I am today and who the the next "ones" will be. History =💗
@BrilliantDesignOnline2 жыл бұрын
Typing is absolutely one of the greatest skills I have learned in life, and probably the most valuable thing I learned in high school. (BTW, the previous sentence contains 49 backspaces :-)
@timbard91613 жыл бұрын
In Tallin or Riga, I saw a unique typing machine that consisted of a left side ceramic dish with the English letters printed in a square pattern in alphabetical order. Suspended above was a "pen" with which the operator spelled out words, letter by letter. The dish providing constant spacing between the pen and the dish surface, limiting parallax errors. Via a lever and arm system the corresponding cast letter was selected (as normal). On the right side was the "print" button. After each selection of a letter in the dish, the right side button was depressed to print the letter on the paper. There were others in the shop, antiques with barrel shaped mechanisms etc.
@noelaguirrechavez44623 жыл бұрын
Fun fact about typing in spanish: since Spanish uses accents for a lot of words and when you typed in upper-case letter the accent mark would mix with the letter, lots of people grew up with the idea that upper-case letters didn't have to be accentuated correctly And until typing in computers became common place, lots of teacher still said that upper case lettering didn't have to be accentuated
@TheHylianBatman3 жыл бұрын
What a delightful episode of the History Guy! I love weird little facts like this. "It's the way it is just because it is".
@matthewpoplawski87403 жыл бұрын
AS ALWAYS THE HISTORY GUY, AN EXCELLENT VIDEO!! Your subject choices never fail to astonish me. In(I believe) in the 70's, IBM came out with an electric typewriter that had a "writing ball". 👏👏👏🌞🌞🌞✌✌✌✌
@maybeparadigm88163 жыл бұрын
As I understood, it was it competition with the Dvorak keyboard set up. Spelling on Dvorak? Where the most used keys were on the center row. It was more efficient than Qwerty but lost the battle.
@TerryBollinger2 жыл бұрын
13:52 "[Better touch keyboards] don't do you any good if you're just typing with your thumbs!" The tendency of QWERTY to make adjacent English letters fall on opposite sides of the keyboard is very likely advantageous for one of the fastest forms of word input, swipe typing since it makes swipe word patterns more likely to be distinct from each other. To adepts, these patterns become words, not unlike Chinese characters. Thus for an expert swipe typer, the QWERTY keyboard is not just an option, but a necessity.
@wendychavez53483 жыл бұрын
I've been using this since 5th grade, when I apparently taught myself to type (i don't actually remember that, it's one of the casualties of the traumatic brain injury that wiped or altered most of my memories). Great episode!
@raychang86483 жыл бұрын
Excellent video! I am no longer capable of typing using a QWERTY keyboard, as I learned Dvorak about 30 years ago. My job was being a secretary and I had terrible carpal tunnel syndrome from typing all day. Dvorak cleared that up and I've been using that ever since. I have no problem using QWERTY on my phone, though.
@warrenread74883 жыл бұрын
I've heard this bit of history dozens of times, but this is the first time I found it so interesting.
@richardrosenthal72413 жыл бұрын
I worked for Olivetti fixing typewriters that was in the early 1970's the business was undergoing rapid change from manual machine to electronic to obsolete . I left the industry for a City job in 1990 and I was very glad I did. Thanks for the brief history of the typewriters now how about carbon paper and stencils
@morganahoff22422 жыл бұрын
12:25 You can see how the QWERTY layout works to prevent machines from jamming: the left hand is still, while the right hand hunts for letters, and vice versa. Letters used commonly together fall under the same hand, reducing the chance of them being keyed too close together. Compare to other layouts like DVORAK, where one hand types while the other hand hunts, almost constantly. Good point at 13:50, that the effectiveness of the QWERTY layout is irrelevant, when used for thumb-boarding.
@seanbatiz66202 жыл бұрын
Typing class for me during Jr HS back in the 80’s, was the only class i definitely received an F grade in, as the teacher was always extremely frustrated with me being more fascinated with how the typewriters functioned, then using them; he’d come around to my table & see it nearly half taken apart & about have a dang heart attack… every time i’d dig into it! 🤣… later on tho, i’d inevitably find myself working a summer job, servicing IBM Selectronic Typewriters… made some decent pocket change during those summers that helped fund my then obsession of vinyl record collecting, as then, CD’s and still to some degree, compact cassette tapes, were all the rage & most record albums could be had for between 0.25¢ to about $2.00; generally in pristine condition still. By the end of 1993, I had collected about 800 albums on vinyl, mostly acquired from $ earned repairing them crazy IBM Selectronic Typewriters!
@timothymorrison22143 жыл бұрын
Great information. Typing was the best course I took in high school. Still use it at age 69!
@richarddouglas97912 жыл бұрын
Same here. I can’t imagine going through college and law school with poor handwriting, and not being able to type as I did with all my examinations I only regret is that I did not apply myself sufficiently in secondary school to improve my skills. I did not recognize the. Utility of the skill until much later. 15:13
@j11662403 жыл бұрын
Excellent work! Thank you and I appreciate the huge amount of research you do to provide this content. It really shows that you love what you do.
@rebeccapaul4183 жыл бұрын
I learned to type on a qwerty before I could write and that was 36 years ago! I love this episode and my father will too.
@ELMS3 жыл бұрын
I’m a bit of a typewriter historian. This was just excellent. Well done.
@njpaddler3 жыл бұрын
There, you've done it. In fifteen minutes & twelve seconds you've made Tom Hanks day. As to voice recognition, I 'll quote a forum favorite: "Auto-correct is my new enema,"
@calrob3002 жыл бұрын
What an assortment of fits and starts. I once heard, or read, that the origin of the QWERTY layout was due to a family randomly selecting letters written on pieces of paper. The family patriarch was one of the people involved in the manufacturing end. I wonder if there is any documentation of this.
@mrcryptozoic8172 жыл бұрын
It was developed because the most sensible arrangement of letters caused key jams because typists were too fast for the machine. QWERTY slowed them down enough so two keys couldn't collide when one came up before the previous got out of the way. Curses upon the guy who made that change!
@thechancellor37152 жыл бұрын
With all these memories of learning to type on manual typwriters and talk of speed one important thing has escaped mention, the carriage return lever. The carriage return lever moved the rubber coated platen back to the right so that that left margin was aligned for the first letter as well asrotating the platen upward for the next line...that required a good back hand smack with tthe right hand, leaving the left hand still posed on the querty side. Did this contribute in designing the qwerty keys to be on left for quicker resumption? That motion setting the mass of the carriage caused quite a thump. trivia: Turned out that the typing class in Jr. High prepared me for JROTC in high school when during inspection of our U.S. Rifle caliber .30 M1s the same motion was applied using the side of the hand to slam the bolt back for viewing.
@misterflibble66013 жыл бұрын
THG has a way of making the minutiae of history not just interesting but revealing just what a huge impact it can have
@vinnykeenan63553 жыл бұрын
Very interesting how that story unfolded over time. I never realized the twists and turns that were involved in the development of the typewriter. As a side note, check into the history of the Hoosac Tunnel in northern Mass. It has quite a story behind it Vinny in CT
@qwertyuiop1st3 жыл бұрын
There will always be a need for a manual interface with our devices, I am extremely comfortable assuming that the only thing that will replace the Qwerty keyboard is a superior keyboard. A lot of people write in public places where they don't want to be overheard....
@jovanweismiller71143 жыл бұрын
Have you ever had the misfortune to have to type on a non-QWERTY keyboard? When I was in university back in the 1960s I had no typewriter. I had an assignment that had to be typed. There were three Dutchmen living in the flat above me. I borrowed their typewriter. The keyboard made 'hunt'n'peck' a whole new adventure!