Subject: [bounces past on a bright red space hopper]
Author:
Posted on: 2019-10-03 15:41:00 UTC

I can't speak for the other periods but what you've just said makes me certain beyond doubt that the Victorian PPC's consoles are, in fact, the demonic lovechild of a Difference Engine and a linotype machine.

For those who don't have a relative in the print trade, a linotype machine is basically what they used to set type for printing back in the day, by which I mean up until the late 1980s. They squirted molten metal into moulds set by a typesetter that were selected by pressing down levers. The individual letters, called keys, were cast from harder metals and kept in a box, from which the typesetter selected them and built up a line of text. Metal spacers were used to put gaps between words, and upon completing a line, you pushed a big lever to enter the type into the machine, whereupon it was used to cast a mould and print the result.

If you wanted to use a different kind of letter, you could use a different set that came from a different type foundry. Capital letters were kept in a separate box. So basically:-

You pressed in keys and used a space bar to make words, you could choose between upper and lower case letters, and you could change your font.

Y'all done learned a thing! =]

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