electronic typewriter was replaced by manual typewriter. true or false
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Answer:
true
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Answer:
Electronic typewriter was replaced by manual typewriter true
Explanation:
- On manual typewriters, the mechanical motions you make directly operate the mechanism which places characters on the paper, [ and moves the paper and ribbon. On Electrics, your mechanical motions trigger actions usually driven by an electric motor. Electronic typewriters are basically computers, which are pretty dumb to pretty sophisticated. You pressing keys gets processed by the computer chip which decides on the actions the mechanism must take to achieve. The mechanism on an electronic typewriter is pretty simple, compared to fully mechanical manual and electric typewriters. Sophisticated electronic typewriters may have screens where you can pre-edit text, and even store it.
- The final major development of the typewriter was the "electronic" typewriter. Most of these replaced the typeball with a plastic or metal daisy wheel mechanism (a disk with the letters molded on the outside edge of the "petals"). [ The daisy wheel concept first emerged in printers developed by Diablo Systems in the 1970s. In 1981, Xerox Corporation, who by then had bought Diablo Systems, introduced a line of Electronic Typewriters incorporating this technology (the Memory writer product line).
- For a time, these products were quite successful as their plastic daisy-wheel was much simpler and cheaper than the metal typeball and their electronic memory and display allowed the user to easily see errors and correct them before they were actually printed. One problem with the plastic daisy wheel was that they were not always durable.
- To solve this problem, more durable metal daisy wheels were made available (but at a slightly higher price). These and similar electronic typewriters were in essence dedicated word processors with either single line LCD displays or multi-line CRT displays, built-in line editors in ROM, a spelling and grammar checker, a few kilobytes of internal RAM and optional cartridge, magnetic card or diskette external memory-storage devices for storing text and even document formats.
- Text could be entered a line or paragraph at a time and edited using the display and built-in software tools before being committed to paper. Unlike the Selectrics and earlier models, these really were "electronic" and relied on integrated circuits and multiple electromechanical components
Reference Link
- https://brainly.in/question/11927198
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