Nostalgia For Typewriting? Not Me

Forbes’ Alex Knapp isn’t lamenting the final end of the typewriter era. Neither am I, although I still have two of them – a compact Smith-Corona and a hulking, ancient Remington office desktop model. Neither has typed a stroke for years, and I should just send them wherever old typewriters go to die, but there is sentimental value. I cut my teeth as a writer and journalist on those machines.

No regrets about moving on, however. Aside from non-dependence on electric power, I can’t think of one practical advantage the typewriter has over the personal computer.

One thing a computer, or even a tablet, soft keyboard notwithstanding (although Knapp considers them “neat, overpriced toys”) is unequivocally a massive improvement in the writer’s life is for typing, to say nothing of vastly easier, quicker, and more versatile corrections, editing and revision.

However, I agree with Knapp, who says even though he’s been using computers since he was 5, he still prefers to think out loud on pen and paper, and still do a lot of my composing on paper in longhand, entering the draft on the computer with Dragon Dictate dictation software. Of course I came much later in life to computers, getting my first word processor when I was 40 and my first Mac, a compact Mac Plus desktop, a year later.

As Alex puts it, like the vinyl record and the compact tape cassette, typewriters served their purpose, but we now have much, much better substitutes.

Links above take you to retailer's website. MacPrices is a verified Apple affiliate.