Could also be a rare spoon sandwich too.
Could also be a rare spoon sandwich too.
No offence to you OP, but that second paragraph of yours makes it sound like spam. Might want to consider rephrasing.
I don’t believe that they would be Selectrics. Those were essentially big hunks of electromechanical steel/cast iron, and would have lacked the componentry to drive and run an LCD screen, since they didn’t have any transistorised electronics at all.
Since the keyboard was mechanical, there would be no easy way for a computer to interpret the input.
From the sounds of it, what you learned on might have been some form of word processor or teletype.
The Selectrics weren’t all that quiet. They were electromechanical not electronic, so you would have motor hum, and noises from the various other mechanisms.
Although it made them amazing to type on, in a way that conventional keyboards can’t quite recapture.
Those key legends seem like they would be all but impossible to read, unless you had perfect lighting.
They’ve had them for ages, as part of the breakfast menu.
Have spaces around curly braces modify the behaviour. That way, you can incorporated both.
That’s why you get the best of both worlds, and combine them to use tabspaces. Everyone will hate you equally, achieving true equality in the process.
You may as well get a brown computer, some brown food, and some brown drink to go with your brown shoes.
Australia. It’s a fair walk.
I just keep them in the box the keyboard came in. It’s already got places for all of those, and not using it seems wasteful.
It also saves having to buy a container, but I also don’t have a lot of replacement switches that might need a box or bag to put them in.