November 28, 2006

Living Automatically (Jul, 1946)

Filed under: Sign of the Times — @ 11:38 am
Source: Popular Science ( More articles from this issue )
Issue: Jul, 1946
| Buy on Ebay

Long before computer labs and internet cafes people had to make due with coin-op typewriters.

Living Automatically

New machines ready to serve at the drop of a coin

A New York restaurant has substituted machinery for waiters. The diner needs only to write out the order and drop the card into a slot in the table, as above (see PSM, Apr. ‘40, p. 126). In a basement kitchen the food is prepared and, course by course, served through the center of the table, which operates like a dumb-waiter (right) by hand or hydraulic power, compressed air, or electricity.

The Transmeter Ticket Vending Machine prints, dates, records and delivers a railroad ticket in a few seconds. The commuter merely sets dial (right) to point of destination and inserts fare. Inventor R. V. Anderson, New York, plans trans-meters to sell tickets for theaters and sports events.

This coin-operated typewriter will be available in hotel lobbies, railroad stations, and even drugstores. When a dime is inserted, the machine unlocks, setting a meter that measures 325 lineal inches—enough to fill a standard letterhead single-spaced and address an envelope or two. Marlyn C. Ford, of Jacksonville, Fla., devised the automatic machine.

1 Comment »

  1. “Long before computer labs and internet cafes people had to make due with coin-op typewriters.”

    and weak, lousy, percolated coffee!

    Comment by Stannous — November 28, 2006 @ 9:09 pm

RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URI

Leave a comment

Popular Posts

Recently Last 7 Days
Last 30 Days Last Year

45 queries. 0.652 seconds.