Engineer & Comma
Have you ever wondered how we could redesign a typewriter so that every punctuation mark comes out perfectly spaced, like a well‑punctuated sentence?
Sure, just give each punctuation key its own little spacing motor. When you hit a comma, the motor pushes the carriage back a fraction of a line, and when you hit a period it pulls it back just enough. Add a small encoder to keep the spacing consistent and the typewriter will read like a properly spaced sentence.
Nice, but just remember that a tiny tweak in spacing can throw the whole rhythm off—like a single misplaced comma can change the meaning entirely. The key is consistency, not just precision.
Exactly, so I’d add a small encoder on the carriage rail and run a feedback loop that enforces the same micro‑step each time a punctuation key is pressed. That way the spacing stays consistent, not just accurate.