• @[email protected]
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    44 months ago

    Classics aka why are you complaining:

    • "Back in my day the job market was also tough“
    • "When I was applying for a job I had to send out 120 handwritten applications“
    • "When I made one mistake on the typewriter I had to rewrite the entire cover letter“

    They also almost had a heart attack when I took a couple months after college to interview because they didn’t understand that there’s like 5-7 interview rounds on average.

    And when I told them I have an offer they were like "wow accept immediately otherwise they’ll rescind it“. And when I told them that I’ll just use that offer as leverage for other potential offers they thought I‘m delusional and acting entitled lol

    • @[email protected]
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      24 months ago

      When I made one mistake on the typewriter I had to rewrite the entire cover letter

      Bro just backspace. What kind of typewriter is this?

      • @[email protected]
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        14 months ago

        Looks like most typewriters before 1973

        Typewriters before this time did possess a backspace key, but it simply moved the carriage back one character space so the typist could use whiteout to remove a mistake. When struck, the correction key of IBM Selectric II would use internal correction tape to remove the mistake and replace it with a letter key manually chosen by the user

        Read more at the ANSI Blog: Invention of the Backspace Key https://blog.ansi.org/?p=7178

        • @[email protected]
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          04 months ago

          but it simply moved the carriage back one character space so the typist could use whiteout to remove a mistake

          So use whiteout!

          • @[email protected]
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            14 months ago

            This works fine for informal things, like a correspondence with a friend, inter office communication, or perhaps a rambling Zine. However, for something formal like a resume, this would be bad etiquette.

            Just a side note, If your mistake was found after removing your paper from the typewriter, good luck getting the paper re-aligned on any typewriter without decent detents built into the platen.