Tom Hanks clearly loves his mechanical typewriters.
I do wonder what he would think of a Selectric typewriter, or a Model M. Maybe I'll ask him. He'd be more likely to repsond to a typewritten letter, I think.

Well, well, I'd wager a Model M would also work a millennia from now, you'll just need a PS/2 -> USB -> [50 connectors later..] -> Optical-Duotronic-Isolinear-Holo-Whatsit adapter!A ribbon can be re-inked in the year 3013 and a typed letter could be sent off that very day, provided the typewriter hasn’t outlived the production of paper.
...or a new controller, like phosphorglow's Colossus.emdude wrote:Well, well, I'd wager a Model M would also work a millennia from now, you'll just need a PS/2 -> USB -> [50 connectors later..] -> Optical-Duotronic-Isolinear-Holo-Whatsit adapter!A ribbon can be re-inked in the year 3013 and a typed letter could be sent off that very day, provided the typewriter hasn’t outlived the production of paper.
"Short of chiseled words in stone, few handmade items last longer than a typed letter, for the ink is physically stamped into the very fibers of the paper, not layered onto the surface as with a laser-printed document or the status-setting IBM Selectric — the machine that made the manual typewriter obsolete."XMIT wrote: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/08/04/opini ... -that.html
Tom Hanks clearly loves his mechanical typewriters.
I do wonder what he would think of a Selectric typewriter, or a Model M. Maybe I'll ask him. He'd be more likely to repsond to a typewritten letter, I think.
No, the correcting tape is adhesive in nature and it pulls the pigment off the paper. A faint ghost of the original glyph typically remains. That's why the longer you wait to use it, the less effect it has. This is how it works on mine at any rate.
No, I have a proper 100% mechanical Remington, no plugs or electricity or anything