Japanese typewriter

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

A typist uses a Japanese typewriter

The first practical Japanese typewriter (Japanese: 和文タイプライター, Hepburn: wabun taipuraitā) was invented by Kyota Sugimoto in 1915. Out of the thousands of kanji characters, Kyota's original typewriter used 2,400 of them.[1] He obtained the patent rights to the typewriter that he invented in 1929.[2] Sugimoto's typewriter met its competition when the Oriental Typewriter was invented by Shimada Minokichi.[3] The Otani Japanese Typewriter Company and Toshiba also released their own typewriters later.[3]

The Japanese typewriter was bulky and laborious to use. Unlike the English-language typewriter, which allows the typist to key in text quickly, one needed to locate and then retrieve the desired character from a large matrix of metal characters.[4] For instance, to type a sentence, the typist would need to find and retrieve around 22 symbols from about three different character matrices, making the sentence longer to type than its romanized version.[4] For this reason, typists were required to undergo specialized training, and typing documents was not part of the duties of the ordinary office worker.[4]

See also

References

  1. .
  2. ^ "Kyota Sugimoto (Japanese Typewriter)". Japan Patent Office. 7 October 2002. Retrieved 18 September 2022.
  3. ^ .
  4. ^ .

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