home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- BUSINESS, Page 52Business NotesTYPEWRITERSOnce High, Now Low
-
-
-
- Nearly 30 years ago, IBM revolutionized the office workplace
- when it introduced the Selectric electric typewriter. The
- premier symbol of the high-tech office of the future, the
- Selectric used plug-in cartridges, instead of messy ink
- ribbons, and replaced the sliding carriage and keys with a
- rotating typing golf ball. Since 1961, IBM has sold some 13
- million Selectrics, making it the best-selling machine in the
- company's 76-year history.
-
- Yesterday's high tech, though, is today's low tech. The
- Selectric lost much of its luster in recent years when
- secretaries switched to word processors and personal computers.
- As a result, IBM is putting its typewriter business on the
- auction block. The most prominently mentioned buyer: Clayton
- & Dubilier, an investment firm. Says Kenneth Camarro, an
- office-automation consultant: "IBM has read the writing on the
- wall." And the writing didn't come from a Selectric.
-
-
-
-
-
-