I like the ruffles.

Kaylee ,'Shindig'


Natter 65: Speed Limit Enforced by Aircraft  

Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, pandas, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.


javachik - Jan 11, 2010 8:53:50 am PST #730 of 30001
Our wings are not tired.

(My father typed her grad school papers for her.)

That was nice of your father!

I was cracking up when I was helping Steve in Boston. At one point, I was hooking up all of his home theater components and putting up shelving and he was in the kitchen, lining his cabinets and putting away dishes. Total stereotypical gender role reversal. He's not mechanical in the slightest and gets befuddled by wires and components and hammers and nails and wrenches.


Jesse - Jan 11, 2010 8:54:47 am PST #731 of 30001
Sometimes I trip on how happy we could be.

He knew how to type! Also, yes.


flea - Jan 11, 2010 8:57:32 am PST #732 of 30001
information libertarian

My ex-dissertation advisor, who is 60, told me that not only did the department have older women who typed your dissertation for you when he did his, they also fixed your grammar and spelling and stuff so you didn't have to worry about those things. I think he got his PhD in 1975.

If I were one of those women, I would have been hard-pressed to not bring a machine gun to work one day.

Also, I don't touch-type. But I am damned fast with the two index fingers. Except for that annoying ' ; key thing.


§ ita § - Jan 11, 2010 8:59:27 am PST #733 of 30001
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

My sister had touch-typing classes in high school. I thought it was N. American bullshit classes. We only had five computers in our whole school in England. And many kids just never used them.

And here I am, at one all the time, touch-typing away. But I don't know how to do it properly. I cheat a lot. And get sore forearms.


SuziQ - Jan 11, 2010 8:59:43 am PST #734 of 30001
Back tattoos of the mother is that you are absolutely right - Ame

Headache + two co-workers on lengthy and lively conference calls + a co-worker who insists on clicking his pen constantly = very unhappy Suzi.


Jesse - Jan 11, 2010 9:03:01 am PST #735 of 30001
Sometimes I trip on how happy we could be.

If I were one of those women, I would have been hard-pressed to not bring a machine gun to work one day.

This is what my mother was hoping to avoid. I never took typing in school, but do touch-type now, if not quite "right."


DavidS - Jan 11, 2010 9:15:13 am PST #736 of 30001
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

My grandfather was an automechanic but he refused to teach my dad anything about fixing cars in the hopes that he'd do something else with his life.

Conversely, my Dad could touch type 90+wpm on a manual typewriter (missing fingers and all) and encouraged me to take typing.

Which I did for two years in HS. And then proceeded to type papers for money in college and support myself with the mad typing skills for years.


Sophia Brooks - Jan 11, 2010 9:17:02 am PST #737 of 30001
Cats to become a rabbit should gather immediately now here

We were required to take a half year keyboarding class in high school, however, I somehow got out of it because I typed all the copy for our school paper (people turned in hard copies of their articles, I edited them and typed them in and then our advisor did a final check). The end result is that I type fast, but not correctly at all. My typos lately seem to come from being on a netbook. I cannot get used to the smaller keyboard, since I sort of touchtype, but not using home row, or my pinkies or any discernible system. I think it is based on how far my fingers stretch for things.


meara - Jan 11, 2010 9:17:20 am PST #738 of 30001

My mom made me take typing in high school (for a semester). It was a very annoying class, because more of it was focused on the "appropriate" way to type a letter and so on...but I do admit, the fact that I touch type probably over 100 wpm is very helpful, now.


Kathy A - Jan 11, 2010 9:17:21 am PST #739 of 30001
We're very stretchy. - Connie Neil

The typing class I took in 1979 (8th grade) was probably the most useful class I ever took. We learned on manual typewriters (the classroom only had a few electric ones), and the error rate allowed was only one per one-minute-long test. I got up to 59 words a minute with one error, which I of course rounded up to 60 wpm when it came to job interviews.