Yeah, I was an outlier. I was attending a prep school from 7th to 9th grade and they made all 7th graders take typing no matter what. It was something that had started long before I attended. Basically by doing this they could then require that all papers be typed when they were submitted for the rest of your time there.
Natter 77: I miss my friends. I miss my enemies. I miss the people I talked to every day.
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, butt kicking, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
In middle school we had to pick a single elective. Although in 6th grade you could take a different one each grading period or something like that. Which is what I did before picking band. There was some kind of business skills elective that was typing, balancing a check book things like that. Which was my only formal typing class until high school typing which was computer based tbe one year I remember taking it
But I had a portable typewriter and an electric typewriter that I would use at home for various things bit I was neve a skilled typist. My skills didn't honed until IRC chat (I met Daniel in one!) And then being online for usenet forums and things like that. I think Mom got us Mavis Beacon teaches typing for home and then I later found typing tests or practices online various places.
Although if it weren't for autocrorrect my typing would be a lot worse and slower with all the going back. At this point on my phone I rely on predictive typing prompts for long words
I'm sorry for all the turmoil, askye. It is hard, and a lot.
I am actually not a good typist anymore, especially not on the phone.
Askye- that sounds so stressful.
I took typing for two years in high school as well as Shorthand! I was the only guy in the Shorthand class.
My dad encouraged me to take typing because he had learned how to type on a manual typewriter in HS in the 40s. He really loved his typing teacher.
After he lost a few fingers in a construction accident at age 16, he was going to quit, but she would have none of it. She made him come after school and meet the typewriter repairman for the district, who was a guy who had lost seven of his fingers (whole and partial) and he could type 90wpm on a manual. So my dad had no excuses.
My high school was brand new so we had gorgeous, brand new IBM Selectric typewriters to learn on. Loved those font-balls! (I'm fascinated by people who collect them. I appreciate the niche.)
I was the only guy in the Shorthand class.
To this day, my mom will write notes to herself in shorthand. I was fascinated by it as a kid.
When she was paying bills, sometimes, my mom would write swears in shorthand in the memo field of her checks — usually to the insurance company, bank, or electric company.
When she was paying bills, sometimes, my mom would write swears in shorthand in the memo field of her checks — usually to the insurance company, bank, or electric company.
Ha!
I remember a children's book that hinged on solving a mystery, which was solved by reading Shorthand which had been stitched into a quilt.
I wonder what the book was. I always wish I'd learned shorthand.
My first auto insurance policy was through a company that called itself [Name] Assurance Company.
I used to address the envelopes to [Name] Ass. Co. It made me feel better.
Timelies all!
Busy morning for me. Got up early(or rather, didn't go back to bed after getting up to medicate the cat) and got my car's emission inspection done. It was originally supposed to be done by April of last year, but because of the pandemic they extended the deadline to April 21 2021. Went home for a bit, then went to the supermarket for the weekly grocery run.
Took typing in junior high for half a year. Not a particularly fast typist.