Nerds per Minute: A History of Competitive Typing

Typing competitions are a forgotten but surprisingly influential aspect of industrial society. Originally introduced in the 1880s to test the durability of various brands of mechanical typewriters, they became a major institution during the first half of the 20th century. The top typists of that era competed at marquee venues like Madison Square Garden and Carnegie Hall, toured the nation like rock stars, made prominent appearances on radio and TV shows, were referenced in newspaper comic strips, gave performances in front of government officials and the United Nations, and even met royalty. The contests were especially noteworthy as they represented one of the first instances of men and women being allowed to compete together on a level playing field in American history - several women won international typing championships before they were even allowed to vote. In addition to playing an unheralded role in women's liberation, the typewriter also helped African-Americans to make inroads into commercial offices thanks to the efforts of Cortez Peters, the first great African-American typist, who successfully integrated typing contests over a decade before Jackie Robinson integrated major league baseball; Peters was also one of the very first African-Americans to establish a chain of business schools in the 1930s. However, because the classic international typewriting championships were never held after 1946, most of the great history of typing competitions has been forgotten by the society at large.

In the 21st century, typing competitions made an unexpected comeback. Shortly after the Internet became mainstream in the late '90s, a wide variety of competitive typing sites were introduced in the 2000s and 2010s such as 10FastFingers, TypeRacer, and Nitro Type, which all attained mass popularity and broke into the gaming mainstream by the late 2010s. Competitive typing became more popular as a participatory pursuit than it had ever been before even as the career prospects for typists plummeted markedly. When Sean Wrona won the inaugural Ultimate Typing Championship in 2010 and much to his horror and chagrin the videos from that contest went semi-viral, he accidentally helped popularize typing competitions to a myriad of millennial and zoomer gamers in the 2010s. In Nerds per Minute, Wrona traces the history of typing from Christopher Latham Sholes's invention of the first mass-produced typewriter to the modern Internet scene. He discusses the history of Sholes's typewriter as well as many other typewriter models that were invented before and after him, how Sholes and his collaborator James Densmore decided upon the QWERTY keyboard layout, the life and history of each of the important typists from Frank McGurrin to Chak, August Dvorak's research and the history of his keyboard layout, the history of European and Japanese typing competitions, how typing competitions connected to historical social trends as a whole, the history of typing games from Typing Tutor, the first mass-produced typing instructional program, to the recent Monkeytype, his own personal memoirs and reflections on the growth of the typing scene, the connection of typing games to the gaming mainstream via gaming celebrities like the late Reckful, along with Wrona's own original research on the fastest and slowest keys, words, and regions of the QWERTY keyboard indicating why the conventional home row wisdom is wrong. He concludes with an in depth description of how he types each key of the keyboard as well as a recap of the second Ultimate Typing Championship in 2020.

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Nerds per Minute: A History of Competitive Typing

Typing competitions are a forgotten but surprisingly influential aspect of industrial society. Originally introduced in the 1880s to test the durability of various brands of mechanical typewriters, they became a major institution during the first half of the 20th century. The top typists of that era competed at marquee venues like Madison Square Garden and Carnegie Hall, toured the nation like rock stars, made prominent appearances on radio and TV shows, were referenced in newspaper comic strips, gave performances in front of government officials and the United Nations, and even met royalty. The contests were especially noteworthy as they represented one of the first instances of men and women being allowed to compete together on a level playing field in American history - several women won international typing championships before they were even allowed to vote. In addition to playing an unheralded role in women's liberation, the typewriter also helped African-Americans to make inroads into commercial offices thanks to the efforts of Cortez Peters, the first great African-American typist, who successfully integrated typing contests over a decade before Jackie Robinson integrated major league baseball; Peters was also one of the very first African-Americans to establish a chain of business schools in the 1930s. However, because the classic international typewriting championships were never held after 1946, most of the great history of typing competitions has been forgotten by the society at large.

In the 21st century, typing competitions made an unexpected comeback. Shortly after the Internet became mainstream in the late '90s, a wide variety of competitive typing sites were introduced in the 2000s and 2010s such as 10FastFingers, TypeRacer, and Nitro Type, which all attained mass popularity and broke into the gaming mainstream by the late 2010s. Competitive typing became more popular as a participatory pursuit than it had ever been before even as the career prospects for typists plummeted markedly. When Sean Wrona won the inaugural Ultimate Typing Championship in 2010 and much to his horror and chagrin the videos from that contest went semi-viral, he accidentally helped popularize typing competitions to a myriad of millennial and zoomer gamers in the 2010s. In Nerds per Minute, Wrona traces the history of typing from Christopher Latham Sholes's invention of the first mass-produced typewriter to the modern Internet scene. He discusses the history of Sholes's typewriter as well as many other typewriter models that were invented before and after him, how Sholes and his collaborator James Densmore decided upon the QWERTY keyboard layout, the life and history of each of the important typists from Frank McGurrin to Chak, August Dvorak's research and the history of his keyboard layout, the history of European and Japanese typing competitions, how typing competitions connected to historical social trends as a whole, the history of typing games from Typing Tutor, the first mass-produced typing instructional program, to the recent Monkeytype, his own personal memoirs and reflections on the growth of the typing scene, the connection of typing games to the gaming mainstream via gaming celebrities like the late Reckful, along with Wrona's own original research on the fastest and slowest keys, words, and regions of the QWERTY keyboard indicating why the conventional home row wisdom is wrong. He concludes with an in depth description of how he types each key of the keyboard as well as a recap of the second Ultimate Typing Championship in 2020.

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Nerds per Minute: A History of Competitive Typing

Nerds per Minute: A History of Competitive Typing

by Sean Wrona
Nerds per Minute: A History of Competitive Typing

Nerds per Minute: A History of Competitive Typing

by Sean Wrona

eBook

$9.99 

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Overview

Typing competitions are a forgotten but surprisingly influential aspect of industrial society. Originally introduced in the 1880s to test the durability of various brands of mechanical typewriters, they became a major institution during the first half of the 20th century. The top typists of that era competed at marquee venues like Madison Square Garden and Carnegie Hall, toured the nation like rock stars, made prominent appearances on radio and TV shows, were referenced in newspaper comic strips, gave performances in front of government officials and the United Nations, and even met royalty. The contests were especially noteworthy as they represented one of the first instances of men and women being allowed to compete together on a level playing field in American history - several women won international typing championships before they were even allowed to vote. In addition to playing an unheralded role in women's liberation, the typewriter also helped African-Americans to make inroads into commercial offices thanks to the efforts of Cortez Peters, the first great African-American typist, who successfully integrated typing contests over a decade before Jackie Robinson integrated major league baseball; Peters was also one of the very first African-Americans to establish a chain of business schools in the 1930s. However, because the classic international typewriting championships were never held after 1946, most of the great history of typing competitions has been forgotten by the society at large.

In the 21st century, typing competitions made an unexpected comeback. Shortly after the Internet became mainstream in the late '90s, a wide variety of competitive typing sites were introduced in the 2000s and 2010s such as 10FastFingers, TypeRacer, and Nitro Type, which all attained mass popularity and broke into the gaming mainstream by the late 2010s. Competitive typing became more popular as a participatory pursuit than it had ever been before even as the career prospects for typists plummeted markedly. When Sean Wrona won the inaugural Ultimate Typing Championship in 2010 and much to his horror and chagrin the videos from that contest went semi-viral, he accidentally helped popularize typing competitions to a myriad of millennial and zoomer gamers in the 2010s. In Nerds per Minute, Wrona traces the history of typing from Christopher Latham Sholes's invention of the first mass-produced typewriter to the modern Internet scene. He discusses the history of Sholes's typewriter as well as many other typewriter models that were invented before and after him, how Sholes and his collaborator James Densmore decided upon the QWERTY keyboard layout, the life and history of each of the important typists from Frank McGurrin to Chak, August Dvorak's research and the history of his keyboard layout, the history of European and Japanese typing competitions, how typing competitions connected to historical social trends as a whole, the history of typing games from Typing Tutor, the first mass-produced typing instructional program, to the recent Monkeytype, his own personal memoirs and reflections on the growth of the typing scene, the connection of typing games to the gaming mainstream via gaming celebrities like the late Reckful, along with Wrona's own original research on the fastest and slowest keys, words, and regions of the QWERTY keyboard indicating why the conventional home row wisdom is wrong. He concludes with an in depth description of how he types each key of the keyboard as well as a recap of the second Ultimate Typing Championship in 2020.


Product Details

BN ID: 2940165026317
Publisher: Sean Wrona
Publication date: 10/01/2021
Sold by: Smashwords
Format: eBook
File size: 882 KB

About the Author

Sean Wrona is an author, historian, archivist, statistician, competitive typist, tournament Scrabble expert, programmer, and YouTuber from Syracuse, New York. He earned a BA in economics and MPS in applied statistics from Cornell University. He has won nineteen typing championships from 2010 to 2021, most notably the Ultimate Typing Championship at the SXSW Interactive Conference in Austin, Texas. He has won the mother tongue championship in Intersteno’s internet contest seven times, more than any other typist, and was the only typist to win the multilingual and mother tongue championships in the same year in 2011. He held the records on three of the most popular competitive typing websites simultaneously, holding the TypeRacer record from 2010 to 2016, the Nitro Type record from 2012 to 2018, and the 10FastFingers record from 2015 to 2019. He was the youngest-ever member of the Mensa Scrabble-by-Mail Special Interest Group though never a Mensa member himself, serving as the group’s statistician in both his teenage years and adulthood and later on becoming the group’s ratings compiler. He has also been published in Cornell University’s Visible Hand economics journal and several auto racing websites: Stock Car Review, HK’s Raceday, and Motorsports Analytics. In 2007, he launched the auto racing statistical archive race-database.com and in 2015, he launched his own advanced auto racing statistics website Racermetrics. He also entered the complete box scores for the 1979-80 through 1984-85 NBA seasons for basketball-reference.com. He recently launched The Maladroit Millennial, a YouTube series on millennial culture as reflected through his life.

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