Those were the days when Linotype machines ruled. That same comment has been echoed whenever there was a technology shift, making things faster & cheaper, but it takes time to obtain better.the owner looked over my shoulder and said, "Looks like shit."
That same comment has been echoed whenever there was a technology shift
Some of it did look bad if you used the cheaper kind of paper in the machine. I remember some that made the type actually fuzzy, and another that was almost like a plastic finish that kept the lettering very crisp. I believe that one was branded ZRC.Those were the days when Linotype machines ruled. That same comment has been echoed whenever there was a technology shift, making things faster & cheaper, but it takes time to obtain better.
Wow! I remember the Comp IV (Oops, missed a character.Time to retype). The “Dread-it Writers” were quite an advancement as long as you didn’t scratch the film strip and put in the correct width card. The MCS 8400 with PowerView was the greatest leap before personal computers came into the picture. Thanks for the memory.Compugraphic - blast from the past. I started out on a Comp IV.
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