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- In the 1840s, the typewriter looked like a piano with A->N on black keys and Z<-O on white keys.
- Multiple variations came in till the early 1870s when Christopher Sholes invented something similar to what we use today.
- It was not exactly the same, e.g., it had “.” where we have R today.
- Remington, which sold weapons and sewing machines then, bought the design from Sholes.
- Remington made minor modifications and, in 1878, brought it even closer to what it looks like today.
- However, M was next to L in the 2nd row and X|C of today were C|X.
- Some stories suggest that QWERTY was designed to prevent the jamming of mechanical typewriters by separating commonly used letter combinations.
- But plenty of other combinations could also do that.
- And many options existed with Remington’s QWERTY at that time.
- The fact that Christopher Sholes, the inventor, himself invented another typewriter (XPMCH) in 1889 shows that QWERTY wasn’t the perfect design.
- But Remington was too big by that time, and most of the typewriters in the market were Remington’s.
- Typewriting, in those days, had to be learnt in classes, and if you took a class, you took it for the most common typewriter because you knew that the prospective employer, most likely, would have a Remington typewriter.
- Then it caught on, and people transitioned from typewriters to keyboards which continued to be QWERTY.
Image courtesy of Tom Swinnen through Pexels
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