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IBM CORRECTING SELECTRIC TYPEWRITER - can it be made a printer? [message #143969] Mon, 15 July 1985 09:10 Go to next message
dob is currently offline  dob
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Article-I.D.: ihlpa.718
Posted: Mon Jul 15 09:10:04 1985
Date-Received: Wed, 17-Jul-85 05:19:50 EDT
Distribution: net
Organization: AT&T Bell Laboratories
Lines: 14

Does anyone know whether the IBM CORRECTING SELECTRIC TYPEWRITER can be
converted to be used as a computer printer?  (I know that the old stand-by
SELECTRIC can be converted but am not sure about this beastie.)  Who does 
this kind of conversion?


Thanks,

---
			Daniel M. O'Brien (ihnp4!ihlpa!dob)
			AT&T Bell Laboratories
			IH 4A-258, x 4782
			Naperville-Wheaton Road
			Naperville, IL 60566
Re: IBM CORRECTING SELECTRIC TYPEWRITER [message #143989 is a reply to message #143969] Tue, 16 July 1985 10:59 Go to previous messageGo to next message
irwin is currently offline  irwin
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Article-I.D.: uiucdcs.10400198
Posted: Tue Jul 16 10:59:00 1985
Date-Received: Thu, 18-Jul-85 05:35:13 EDT
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Nf-From: uiucdcs.Uiuc.ARPA!irwin    Jul 16 09:59:00 1985


Anderson-Jacobson cranked out a lot of converted selectrics. I have
one of them. You might contact their company to see if they are
making one for the IBM Correcting unit. Don't have their address
at hand, but they have ads in several of the popular computer mags.
Re: IBM CORRECTING SELECTRIC TYPEWRITER [message #148248 is a reply to message #143969] Wed, 17 July 1985 20:07 Go to previous messageGo to next message
johnl is currently offline  johnl
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Article-I.D.: ima.38800006
Posted: Wed Jul 17 20:07:00 1985
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Nf-From: ima!johnl    Jul 17 20:07:00 1985


If the selectric typewriter you want to convert is an electronic model
65 or 85, IBM themselves have a kit to plug the typewriter into the
printer port of a PC.  We have one -- it works fine.

The conversion from ascii to typewriter code is made in software, and IBM
provides a program that lurks in front of the printer port, doing the
translation automatically.  I expect you could plug the typewriter into
any other computer's Centronics port, but you'd have to deal with the
translation yourself.

John Levine, Javelin Software, Cambridge MA 617-494-1400
{ decvax!cca | think | ihnp4 | cbosgd }!ima!johnl, Levine@YALE.ARPA
Re: IBM CORRECTING SELECTRIC TYPEWRITER - can it be made a printer? [message #148351 is a reply to message #143969] Thu, 25 July 1985 13:47 Go to previous message
Anonymous
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Originally posted by: cramer@kontron.UUCP (Clayton Cramer)
Article-I.D.: kontron.412
Posted: Thu Jul 25 13:47:39 1985
Date-Received: Sun, 28-Jul-85 07:22:39 EDT
References: <718@ihlpa.UUCP>
Distribution: net
Organization: Kontron Electronics, Irvine, CA
Lines: 24

> Does anyone know whether the IBM CORRECTING SELECTRIC TYPEWRITER can be
> converted to be used as a computer printer?  (I know that the old stand-by
> SELECTRIC can be converted but am not sure about this beastie.)  Who does 
> this kind of conversion?
> 
> 
> Thanks,
> 
> ---
> 			Daniel M. O'Brien (ihnp4!ihlpa!dob)
> 			AT&T Bell Laboratories
> 			IH 4A-258, x 4782
> 			Naperville-Wheaton Road
> 			Naperville, IL 60566

Gag.  A couple years ago I saw a company near San Jose advertising a product
that "turns your Selectric typewriter into a computer printer".  It was a
box containing a bunch of electrically actuated rods that mounted on top of
the keyboard.  The box had a cable that plugged into an RS-232 port.  And
it only cost $500!  (I'm serious.  So were they.  More's the pity.)

Seriously, unless someone will do a conversion for $200, it makes a lot more
sense to buy a daisy wheel printer; even the lowest speed daisy wheel printers
will be as fast or faster.
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