Typewriters business still in demand in Myanmar's Yangon

Skip to: New Posts  Last Post
Posted by Laurenz van Gaalen
29-6-2020 06:01:24
#1

I was happily surprised to read typewriters are still used professionally in some parts of the world.

http://www.globaltimes.cn/content/1166336.shtml

 
Posted by Uwe
29-6-2020 10:23:57
#2

Unless it's changed recently, this exact service is also quite common in India and the Philippines, and I would suspect throughout SE Asia. Five years ago one such street typist in India made [url=https://www.indiatvnews.com/news/india/up-cop-smashes-elderly-man-typewriter-54736.html#:~:text=New%20Delhi%3A%20Images%20of%20a%20Uttar%20Pradesh%20Police,as%20he%20was%20sitting%20in%20the%20parking%20region.]the news[/url] when his machine was destroyed by a police officer.

On another key, your article would make a great ad for Olympia:
'What typewriter do professional typists in Myanmar prefer? Why the Olympia SG3, of course! Durable, reliable, and easy to use, this air-cooled wonder can churn out legal documents all-day-long.'

Not that I could ever make a living from it, but a few times a year I get paid to create a typewritten document (most often it's bad poetry).  


The pronoun has always been capitalized in the English language for more than 700 years.
 
Posted by Laurenz van Gaalen
29-6-2020 13:00:20
#3

Olympia should have hired you as copywriter when they still could.

Concerning the SG 3*, I can't see the keyboards very clear, but I assume they are Burmese?
So these people use old technology with a very specific keyboard.
For sure not your every day standard...

* Is it SG3 or SG 3? Pricelists, leaflets and manuals from Olympia use a space between the class and the number; SG 1, SM 9 etc. I think it's logical to write it the way Olympia did, but apparently a lot of people omit the space. I find it confusing, is there a reason for this?

 
Posted by Uwe
04-7-2020 10:05:26
#4

Laurenz van Gaalen wrote:

Is it SG3 or SG 3? Pricelists, leaflets and manuals from Olympia use a space between the class and the number; SG 1, SM 9 etc. I think it's logical to write it the way Olympia did, but apparently a lot of people omit the space. I find it confusing, is there a reason for this?

I most often type SG3 because it's the easiest.

From all the Olympia materials I've seen, I can recall the company using one of three designators. End consumer-related items such as manuals would identify the machine (and all other models) with a space: SG 3. In other Olympia documents such as parts catalogues there's normally a hyphen in there: SG-3. And, in brochures and technical documents there wouldn't be a space or hyphen at all: SG3.

It would appear that not even Olympia could decide on a standard way to write its model names and all of the above forms are acceptable. Why the variants? It could be as simple as what a layout artist, copy writer and technician believed was most correct.


The pronoun has always been capitalized in the English language for more than 700 years.
 
Posted by Laurenz van Gaalen
04-7-2020 14:28:04
#5

Thanks Uwe for your clear and interesting answer. I was not aware of the other two designators. I simply assumed that Olympia used the same designators in all publications.

 
Posted by Uwe
05-7-2020 10:21:23
#6

For example:


The pronoun has always been capitalized in the English language for more than 700 years.
 
Posted by Laurenz van Gaalen
05-7-2020 14:46:05
#7

Peculiar. Was this typical for Olympia or was it common practice back in the days?

 


 
Main page
Login
Desktop format