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Mark S. Holden wrote:
Frank Dresser wrote: "Sir Cumference" wrote in message ... The Selectric Composer could do proportional font spacing, but it was a high-quality, high-end, expensive unit used mostly by commercial printing firms for producing camera ready type or firms needing high-quality printing. And they were not easy to use or repair. Even so, I'd think someone would have retyped the documents on such a typewriter by now, just to prove that it they didn't have to have been done MS Word. Frank Dresser They have. http://shapeofdays.typepad.com/the_shape_of_days/2004/09/the_ibm_selectr.html And the author says, "Typing "IBM Selectric Composer" into that search site took me to the aptly named ibmcomposer.org, which describes itself as "the only site on the Internet completely dedicated to the IBM 'Selectric' Composer line of typesetting machines." The site, which is run by Gerry Kaplan, includes information, scanned user manuals, and photographs of the only working IBM Selectric Composer I've been able to find." Notice that last sentence, "only working IBM Selectric Composer I've been able to find." Being high-end, high-dollor, machines designed mostly for the commercial printing industry, these units were not found in abudance, especially in clerical offices for cranking out memos and general correspondance. I spent 27 years with IBM and never saw one of these units while Selectrics were everywhere. My wife was a secretary at IBM, and she never saw a Composer unit. So what are the chances of a small Texas ANG unit having a Composer unit?... slim to none with the emphasis on none. |
#2
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= = = Sir Cumference wrote in message
= = = ... Mark S. Holden wrote: Frank Dresser wrote: "Sir Cumference" wrote in message ... The Selectric Composer could do proportional font spacing, but it was a high-quality, high-end, expensive unit used mostly by commercial printing firms for producing camera ready type or firms needing high-quality printing. And they were not easy to use or repair. Even so, I'd think someone would have retyped the documents on such a typewriter by now, just to prove that it they didn't have to have been done MS Word. Frank Dresser They have. http://shapeofdays.typepad.com/the_shape_of_days/2004/09/the_ibm_selectr.html And the author says, "Typing "IBM Selectric Composer" into that search site took me to the aptly named ibmcomposer.org, which describes itself as "the only site on the Internet completely dedicated to the IBM 'Selectric' Composer line of typesetting machines." The site, which is run by Gerry Kaplan, includes information, scanned user manuals, and photographs of the only working IBM Selectric Composer I've been able to find." Notice that last sentence, "only working IBM Selectric Composer I've been able to find." Being high-end, high-dollor, machines designed mostly for the commercial printing industry, these units were not found in abudance, especially in clerical offices for cranking out memos and general correspondance. I spent 27 years with IBM and never saw one of these units while Selectrics were everywhere. My wife was a secretary at IBM, and she never saw a Composer unit. So what are the chances of a small Texas ANG unit having a Composer unit?... slim to none with the emphasis on none. SC, A "Lie" can be perpetrated when it is supported by a 'kernel-of-truth'; even though that 'kernel-of-truth' is unrelated to substance of the Lie. ssi ~ RHF .. |
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