The Sholes and Glidden typewriter first marketed in 1874 is the first model that used the QWERTY patent! Hope that helps Steve
QWERTY
He invented the typewriter and QWERTY keyboard we use today
The first typewriter that Sholes and Glidden developed was called the "Sholes and Glidden typewriter," also known as the Remington No. 1. It was the first commercially successful typewriter and featured the QWERTY keyboard layout that is still in use today.
Qwerty keyboard.
Not they did not use qwerty, the standardized keyboard, because their language requires marks that are not on that keyboard. We have a German typewriter my husband added to his collection. The keyboard is very different, even on the Enigma code machine. They even have a slightly different keyboard for the computers today.
Quote from www.wikipedia.org QWERTY (pronounced /ˈkwɝti/) is the most common modern-day keyboard layout on English-language computer and typewriter keyboards. It takes its name from the first six characters seen in the far left of the keyboard's top first row of letters. The QWERTY design was patented [1] by Christopher Sholes in 1874[2] and sold to Remington in the same year, when it first appeared in typewriters.
qwerty is the name of the keyboard that modern computer use. the inventor decided to use this name because it id the first five letters in the first row of the keyboard.
Christopher Latham Sholes , an American inventor, is the Father of the Typewriter. He also designed the QWERTY keyboard that we still use today.
if you are on a computer you are using a qwerty keyboard
the advantages of a qwerty keyboard is that you can use it like a home computer; instead of the mobile phone keypad. on that you have to press more than once for each letter :-)also alot of people use the qwerty keyboard and so you will be like other people
how to qwerty keypad samsuns5620
The typewriter was invented by Christopher Latham Sholes, Carlos Glidden, and Samuel W. Soule in 1868. They created the first commercially successful typewriter known as the Sholes and Glidden Type-Writer, commonly known as the Remington No. 1.