See, there’s your answer – or at least the easiest answer: whatever you write on a typewriter is what you put in your Typospheric blog posts. I don’t think there ever was any limitation as to subject matter, but something about typewriters or what you do with them, or just whatever you’ve typed.
Common popular topics include “hey I found a new vintage thing” posts, repair posts, historical research articles, poems, typed reports on random topics & general doodling on the keys. Take a breath, hit the keys and scan what comes off the platen. Maybe add photos because they’re pretty and worth a thousand words or something. Go ye therefore and do. 😀
I’m up to 3 SG1’s myself! Must sell a couple of them to raise funds for my nonprofit friends. They are amazing constructions.
I like this. The question of why, in 2019, one blogs with typewriters is answered directly by the mere act of doing so.
I’ve thought about blogs as literally web logs: a log of one’s thoughts or activities. A document of one’s life, made public. I think of Star Trek and Captain Kirk’s log, would that be the first “web log?” Considering they must of had an Internet in the 23rd century?
Keep writing and posting.
See, there’s your answer – or at least the easiest answer: whatever you write on a typewriter is what you put in your Typospheric blog posts. I don’t think there ever was any limitation as to subject matter, but something about typewriters or what you do with them, or just whatever you’ve typed.
Common popular topics include “hey I found a new vintage thing” posts, repair posts, historical research articles, poems, typed reports on random topics & general doodling on the keys. Take a breath, hit the keys and scan what comes off the platen. Maybe add photos because they’re pretty and worth a thousand words or something. Go ye therefore and do. 😀
I’m up to 3 SG1’s myself! Must sell a couple of them to raise funds for my nonprofit friends. They are amazing constructions.
I like this. The question of why, in 2019, one blogs with typewriters is answered directly by the mere act of doing so.
I’ve thought about blogs as literally web logs: a log of one’s thoughts or activities. A document of one’s life, made public. I think of Star Trek and Captain Kirk’s log, would that be the first “web log?” Considering they must of had an Internet in the 23rd century?
Weblog = We Blog. Hmm…
Well done.