Warning!
This video is
UNSCRIPTED!
The jacket is back because....
because.
Uh, so, say it's the 1980's --late 1980's
or early 1990's, and you've always wanted
to be able to write your letters as a document,
save them to a floppy disk to edit later,
but you've never been able to afford one of
these newfangled personal computers.
Well, Smith Corona has got you covered with
this:
This bad boy is the Smith Corona PWP-3200.
It is a typewriter that has a VERY large LCD
display and most importantly, a floppy disk drive.
Let's take a look at it.
Alright so let's get into it.
Obviously this was a Goodwill find, as you
can see by the sticker, I've had this for
a number of years and you'll see a great example
of that in just a moment.
So really, all this is is a daisy wheel printer
(and we'll look a bit more at that in a bit)
but it's a daisy wheel printer which has been
integrated into a typewriter chassis with
a floppy disk drive and a very basic computer.
And, well first let's turn it on.
Most typewriters don't turn on like this.
[various mechanical sounds, like a printer
initializing]
[beep]
Alright, so now we're in.
So immediately, what you get is you get this
word processing display.
You'll notice that there's a switch here that
says type and word processing (WP), we're
on word processing now so when I type stuff,
which is gonna be hard to do with where you
are as the camera, you'll see it appears on
the screen, the typewriter is not actually
typing anything.
Now the beautiful thing about this, is that
you can write documents on the screen before
you even print it, and it warns you if you've
made a typo.
[fast double beep]
It doesn't think "typo" is a word, so once you hit the
space bar it beeps at you to tell you, you
may want to rethink that.
Uh, also this is unique to Smith Corona apparently,
these functons "Word Eraser", there's a Registered
Trademark thing on there so I'm guessing it's
some "special feature".
If you hit Word Eraser it just deletes that
entire word.
And if you hit Code and hit the same key,
it will erase the entire line.
But what we're really here for is the word
processing function.
So, on the right-hand side is a floppy disk
drive.
Now I'm using what used to be Microsoft Works
because the floppy drive on here can only
read 800kb formatted floppies, so any disk
that has been formatted as a high density
disk it can't read, because the read/write
head is not strong enough to overwrite the
high density disk.
So if you have an unformatted high density
disk it can use it, but if it's ever been
formatted it won't work.
So this was one of very few 800kb non-high
density disks I had, and I am not in need
of Microsoft Works for the Apple Macintosh,
so I went ahead and used this.
So with it in the floppy drive, to get to
what's on the disk--all of these little menu
items here, you can see they have an underscored
letter.
To access them you hit "select" and hit that
letter.
So we're gonna go to the disk menu, which
is select-D. And, weirdly, you hear it access
the floppy but it hasn't actually done anything
yet.
You actually have to select Save, Recall,
Erase, Rename, Join, Directory, or Other.
So we're gonna hit recall.
And now it brings up a directory of what is
on the disk to be recalled.
So...just so that way you can see how much
of a dork I am, I'm gonna pull up this file.
But first it's gonna warn me we have text
in memory, do we want to keep it or not?
No.
This was a homework assignment.
When I was in my senior year of high school--I
believe that was the year I got this--I'm
such a dork that I did some of my homework
assignments on this machine.
So, if you want to just read this...this is
just so incredibly, ugh.
It's not great.
But, it shows you the power of a machine like
this.
Now, sadly, and I bet a lot of people who
bought these machines were very disappointed
in this, the actual computer--I've no idea
what system this is--but it is incredibly
slow.
If you want to just scroll through this, it
has to re-draw line by line.
And it is not fast.
If you hit Code and the down arrow it will
redraw the entire screen but even that--this
is not fast at all.
This is very, very slow.
So yeah, it's useful in that you can review
an entire document before you print it.
But this is not at all what I'd consider to
be.... ideal.
Of any sort.
Want to take a look at my writing when I was
in high school?
There we go.
So how does it actually type stuff?
Or print stuff, I should say.
Well first, I'm actually going to reboot it
here, so I'm gonna shut it off.
'Cause I want to show you what's underneath.
So this here is the daisy wheel, this is how
it's actually "typing".
Each one of these little fins has an engraving
on it that it uses to punch onto the actual
writing surface.
This is sort of similar to the IBM Selectric
golf ball type thing, but nowhere near as,
um, well honestly nowhere near as interesting.
And also, these are plastic and I'm always
a little curious on how long these actually
last.
You can see there's a registration point here.
And the idea with using the daisy wheels is
that you can change the typeface or the font
of what exactly it's typing.
So the daisy wheel just rests in here, and
then it will automatically catch.
And this here is the ribbon that it uses to
type with.
I do not have correction tape for this machine,
so... it's just what it is.
Sadly it won't let you print anything with
the cover open so I'll have to close it, we'll
get a better angle for you.
Just like any typewriter you load it up with
paper before you begin.
It's got markings here for what various different
paper sizes.
The unlabeled one which continues through
here is gonna be your standard letter paper
(in the US).
So, with this machine, if we switch to typewriter
mode, which I've just moved the switch into,
now it will go as you type.
So if I start typing words
[sound of typewriter,
with typo warning beep]
I can't spell typing
so it beeped at me.
You can see...hopefully...that those words
are appearing on the page.
[more typing sounds]
I don't have any correction tape in here,
otherwise I could go and actually correct
it back.
If I hit "Word Eraser ®" it will attempt to
erase it.
[rapid triple-clacks as it attempts to erase
the type]
but there's no actual correction
tape in there so it's not doing anything.
But the thing is, let me move this up a little
bit.
We're gonna go back into word processing mode.
And I will call up that homework assignment.
[floppy drive sounds]
So this option here is to print.
So if we select to print the document, it
gives you the option to setup which I believe
changes the margins and stuff like that but
we're just gonna go with the standard and
hit Print, and it will fire away.
I lied.
First it's gonna ask us if we want to print
the entire document or multiple copies.
So we can do, it's giving me little---it's
pretty self explanatory so we're just gonna
hit return.
[a cacophony of clacking and rapid-fire typing
sounds begins]
OK, so I hit delete to stop the print.
But as you can see, it can print (type) faster
than anyone could actually type, though honestly
not a lot faster.
So, of course it's doing it with 100% accuracy,
but if you use this thing for printing out
an 8 or 9 page letter, that process is gonna
be a few minutes.
And it's probably, uh, I would not be surprised
if this takes well over two minutes to print
one page.
Which isn't exactly fast.
So we'll get a little bit closer here.
[typo beep]
Oh my goodness.
[keyboard sounds as Alec types without speaking
because he can't type and speak at the same time]
[Another beep]
See?
Ugh.
My goodness.
[more speechless typing]
[You should follow the words up there ^^^]
Oh I hit caps lock.
See, if I had done that on a regular typewriter
now we would be deep into the woods.
But let's just go ahead and show you...remember
how I was saying that this is slow?
Oh my goodness it's very slow.
Say I want to erase "IF YOU WANT TO BE SURE
T".
So in order to do that I could press and hold
Backspace or I could hit the "Word Eraser ®"
key, let's see that would be onetwothreefour
five six, seven times.
I'm gonna hit it seven times and watch how
long it takes it to actually process that.
Still goin'.
Yeah that's...that's not exactly what I'd
call fast.
I don't know about you but, uh, that seems
really painful, actually.
But to continue with this little demonstration,
if we select Disk.
What we can do is we can save this.
And it just wants you to give it a name.
And I still have--Oh!
That's an interesting point.
We'll get back to that in a second.
I'm just gonna call it "NAMEHJ".
And now it's saved, so if you back to the
disk menu, we can recall something.
We'll recall "Palindrome".
Gonna dismiss what's in memory because we
saved it to the disk.
I really don't know what this document is,
but now we can go back to what we were working on.
We'll have to scroll down to get to it, though.
Again, we'll erase what's in memory.
And now, there we're back to what we were
doing.
Now obviously if you had an actual computer
this would be a lot easier.
And faster.
But if you had a limited budget, these were
being sold up until at the very latest--or
the very earliest 1993.
I saw a listing for these for sale and they
were less than $300.
So if you were on a tight budget and you wanted
to be able to have many of the features of
a word processor but didn't have your own
computer, something like this might actually
be a pretty good idea.
What I wanted to go back to was, if you saw
when I was saving the file name, it was inserting
special characters even though I was just
touching numbers.
Now, that's because this emulates the way
the caps lock key works on older typewriters.
A couple odd things about the keyboard you
may notice are that comma has got two commas
on there, rather than having a special character
and the comma like you'd expect today, it's
got two commas.
Just as this is two periods.
That's because on older typewriters it wasn't
"caps lock" it was "SHIFT lock".
And that's why this key the default is simply
"lock" and "caps lock" is an option.
So if I hit lock, and unfortunately the light
in the key does not work, you'll see that
I type--oh, apparently I haven't actually
turned it on, there we go--as I type it's
all capital letters, but the period and comma
stay period and comma because there's two
of them.
But any time I hit a number, I'm gonna get
a special character because I don't have "caps
lock" on I have "SHIFT lock" on.
So now every key is shifted.
That's because in the days of manual typewriters
like this, when you hit shift the entire carriage
is lowered.
That's actually why it's called the shift
key because it shifts the carriage down.
And you can see when you get close up that
the capital letters are all on the...well,
let's see I should actually look before I
do a closeup...OK.
So the capital letters are all at the top
of each of these strikers which means that
when it's shifted down the top is what hits
the paper, and when it's not shifted the bottom
is what hits the paper.
And because the platen is curved, even when
you're, uh, the top will miss the paper because
it's farther away from it.
So on a typewriter like this when you engage
shift lock which is this button here, it simply
holds the carriage in the down position.
So if you were to type anything, it would
always be the top of the row because you're
going to have shift lock engaged.
The typewriter, because this is mechanical,
it can't decide to only print numbers as numbers,
it's going to hit "!, ", #, $, %" et cetera,
just as it's gonna hit the "@" vs the "¢" over here.
And yes, "@" keys were on typewriters like
this.
That is not something that email created,
email uses the "@" key because it was a key
nobody used.
[sound of clickity clackity typing from an
old-fashioned typewriter]
[again, you should be looking up there^^^]
[a lovely gentle ding from the bell]
So I hope you enjoyed this video into the
Smith Corona PWP-3200 personal word processor.
Thanks so much for watching, I do hope you
enjoyed the video.
Of course thank you to everyone who supports
the channel on Patreon.
If you're interested in joining the Patreon
supporters out there, please feel free to
check out this link.
I'm gonna have a lot more videos coming soon--I
finally was able to clear out my obligations,
and what you see behind me is nearly complete.
You'll be seeing the full extent of it in
the next video.
Thanks for watching!
