DYSPEPSIA GENERATION

We have seen the future, and it sucks.

The Computer Built to Last 50 Years

8th October 2024

Read it.

Typewriters are incredibly complex and precise piece of machinery. At their peak in the decades around World War II, we built them so well that, today, we don’t need to build any typewriters anymore. We simply have enough of them on earth. You may object that it’s because nobody uses them anymore. It’s not true. Lots of writers keep using them, they became trendy in the 2010s and, to escape surveillance, some secret services started to use them back. It’s a very niche but existing market.

Let’s that idea sink in: we basically built enough typewriters for the world in less than a century. If we want more typewriters, the solution is not to build more but to find them in attics and restore them. For most typewriters, restoration is only a matter of taking the time to do it. There’s no complex skills or tools involved. Even the most difficult operations could be learned alone, by simple trial and error. The whole theory needed to understand a typewriter is the typewriter itself.

One of the first things I bought when I got to college in 1974 was an IBM Selectric typewriter. It cost me $1000 (approximately 7% of the cost of a year at Yale) and it was worth every penny.

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