3 hours ago · Tech · hide · 0 comments

The last post about the Nothing Phone not buffering its button presses reminded me of something. Here’s IBM Selectric, a 1961 typewriter: Past decades get compressed into a singular point in time, so we might all think of Selectric as “yet another old typewriter,” and I definitely did before learning about it. But the Selectric came 80 years after the first typewriters, and it packed so much user-benefitting innovation it really was an iPhone of its time. (Alas, I don’t believe there was a matching “are you getting it?!” keynote.) Selectric was, honestly, a triumph of engineering. It popularized swappable typewriter fonts, showcased good industrial design, enabled jam-free typing, and even invented – although that came a decade after its introduction – an actual destructive Backspace. Crucially, on day one, its typing experience was so fantastic that many of the keys on keyboards we’re using 60 years later are still in the same place Selectric put them. What’s even more impressive?…

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