LOL.
BTW, you don't have to choose between old technology and the new. There is a guy on Etsy who makes these:
https://www.etsy.com/shop/usbtypewriter
I personally like the old mechanical typewriter (though I also have an electronic typewriter) because the nice typing sound it makes. And the keys are harder to hit. It's like piano vs keyboard really. Give your fingers some work out. Don't they look svelte, my fingers?
And each typewriter gives a unique "fingerprint." For bonus point, who can tell me what's the difference between pica & elite? (no google)
I love the part in the video where the guy said (after he figured out how to insert the paper), "I'm good at this." LOL.
How do I know all these? Because..., I used a typewriter when I was in middle school. (OMG!) Schools back in the early 90's were very underfunded, so we had these typewriters. It had the same punch bar thingy as my newly acquired 1947 Underwood Universal. When you click a key, it punches a letter. Then the one from my high school (yes, we still had typewriter back in high school), it required electricity, but it was still largely mechanical (but you didn't have to use much force. It had a ball with all the letters and numbers on it. No, not the "modern" daisy wheel kind).
My flea market find was relatively well dampened. Still has smooth action. And it smells like someone lubricated it with oil. Found the serial number so I know it's Underwood Universal Model F, made in 1947 (the wonder of google). It is somewhat dirty, but for the most part, still in good shape.
The typewriter in the video is still too modern. LOL. That's more like the kind I used in middle school. An Olympia maybe? (the one from high school was a Royal, which could switch between pica and elite). Back in my university days, we had a shop right across the school which sold Olivetti typewriters and other mechanical office equipments. Which was a little odd even at the time, but it's closed now.
Remember those ASCII arts? Back in the days we did that in class for extra bonus, using a typewriter.
And you don't use white out to erase a letter!!! The video is like..., just wrong! We had this thingy called "correction tape." So what you do is, click the backspace key to go back to the wrong letter, press the button or lever to move the ink ribbon out of the way, put the correction in front of the wrong letter, and type over it. The correction tape is white, so it covers the wrong letter. My modern Brother fully electronic typewriter, if you don't use the LCD "word processor" screen to proofread, it has the correction tape built-in, so all you do is click the backspace, and the typo is automatically erased (and you can choose per letter or erase the whole word). OMG. Isn't that an engineering marvel? LOL.
Yes, like the video showed, you have to type one paper at a time (we didn't use carbon paper in school). Some people used to make a living typing letters. You gotta be quick and no typos, and you proofread your own stuff. Imagine a typewriter with a cellphone auto correct function in it. LOL
This post probably makes me 20 years older. LOL