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  • Greetings and welcome to an LGR thing! And today I have a smaller kind of thing,

  • just a neat little piece of history to share and something a little easier to

  • edit while I'm working on more involved video projects. And that is the original

  • IBM ThinkPad, technically speaking! I'm not trying to clickbait you, it really is

  • just an IBM pad that says "THINK" on it, hence it being colloquially known as the

  • "think pad." Yeah this is a real thing, long before IBM started selling

  • ThinkPad computers the company distributed these little note pads to its employees,

  • salesmen, and various associates. They referred to them as the "Pocket-sized

  • Think Jotter" and it measures three inches by four and a half inches, or about the

  • size of a billfold wallet. A nice compact little thing that's just the right size

  • for fitting into a shirt pocket. And being that this was distributed at IBM

  • you know there were plenty of dress shirts with pockets to fill! A convenient

  • spot to keep such a thing, so whenever you were struck with a brilliant idea

  • for a new kind of cash register mechanism or something, you could whip

  • out a pen and jot it down because you're someone that THINKS. And whenever you

  • used up the paper inside IBM would provide refills if you wrote to the

  • nearest IBM office. Or in the case of my particular pad the eastern regional

  • headquarters on Madison Avenue in New York City. Yeah I just like the design of

  • this a whole lot. Earlier ones I believe were actual leather with stitching and

  • everything, this one's not. But it still has a satisfying leatherette texture with

  • shiny gilded edges to the paper, each sheet of which is just thick enough not

  • to let most inks seep through. And then there's the embossed golden lettering on

  • the front that simultaneously screams "classy" and "serious business" like only an

  • IBM product could. And I'm not sure how old this particular Think Jotter is but

  • the place I bought it from said it's from the mid-1950s and yeah, it sure

  • smells like it. *SNIFF!* Ah, it has that unmistakable aroma of a mid-20th century

  • book, with the breaking down of various components in the paper and the decades

  • old mustiness mixing together to provide that oddly intoxicating nose feel.

  • Sometimes I just like going to antique stores and libraries to smell this and

  • yeah here we go: you got that aroma in the palm of your

  • hand and it's awesome. While I don't know how old this one in particular is, what I

  • know for sure is that IBM distributed these Think jotters throughout most of

  • the 20th century. And the whole concept was not only to provide somewhere for

  • their IBMers to jot down any spur-of-the-moment ideas, but also to

  • encourage them to THINK. Just, THINK for a second before doing anything rash and

  • non-IBM-like. "Think" was more than just a slogan, it was a corporate culture and a

  • philosophy for doing business for them. And it was first used by Thomas John

  • Watson senior in 1911, back before he was at IBM and even before IBM was IBM. They

  • were still known as the Computing-Tabulating-Recording company, or CTR.

  • Apparently during a particularly lackluster sales meeting with National

  • Cash Register, Watson spoke up, saying: "The trouble with everyone of us is that we

  • don't think enough. Knowledge is the result of thought, and thought is the

  • keynote of success in this business or any business. We don't get paid for working

  • with our feet -- we get paid for working with our heads. So basically it was a

  • more businesslike way of saying: *Biff Tannen:* "Hey! Think, McFly, Think!"

  • Then when Mr. Watson arrived at CTR a few

  • years later he brought his THINK philosophy with him. And it also made for

  • quite the striking and iconic trademark and ended up being used on tons of IBM

  • signs, marketing, exhibits, merchandise and all sorts of stuff throughout the years.

  • And of course there were the THINK notepads which came in various shades of

  • orange and brown originally, and then black like the one I have. And featured

  • slightly different lettering over the decades in terms of size and such.

  • Sometimes it had an IBM logo on the back, sometimes not, but that overall aesthetic

  • of "THINK" stayed pretty much the same. And then that brings us to the ThinkPad

  • computer series, which in particular was quite directly influenced by the THINK

  • notepad. The story goes that when what would become the ThinkPad was in

  • development, IBM employee Denny Wainwright had a Think notepad in his

  • pocket. And inspired by that pad he thought "Think Pad" made sense for a

  • computer. Especially in this case seeing as the product they were naming was not

  • a laptop, but a tablet with a stylus pen, what would become known as the ThinkPad 700T.

  • This is really kind of a digital successor to the original THINK notepad

  • anyway, so it made sense. However, IBM's corporate naming committee

  • didn't like it. Initially there was an issue with the computer being known

  • simply by a name and not a number, how un-IBM was that!

  • Most every computer was known by a three or four digit number.

  • They also sold so many products overseas that there was a concern that

  • "ThinkPad" wouldn't translate super easily into different languages. However, the name

  • made it into the press while the device was still in development and they

  • friggin loved it, so it just kind of stuck. They went with

  • the name and the ThinkPad line became one of the most famous portable computer

  • series. That's a story for another day but anyway yeah, the THINK notepad, man.

  • There's just something supremely satisfying about these things while also

  • being a little bit off-putting if I'm honest. It almost comes across as

  • speaking down to you, reprimanding you for not doing something so simple as

  • putting two thoughts together. But being vaguely condescending or not, at the same

  • time I just like notepads and having one from old-school IBM is kind of neat as

  • someone who enjoys their retro PCs. And if you want to enjoy one yourself it

  • turns out finding originals secondhand, even new-old-stock ones, is not too

  • difficult either, with a nice one ranging anywhere from 10 to 20 bucks online

  • currently. And they remain popular enough that IBM actually still sells new

  • versions of them, complete with refill packs, as well as a crapload of other

  • "Think" merchandise that I had no idea about until I was starting to make this

  • video. And now I kind of want some of it but then again I don't corporate culture

  • kind of weirds me out, but anyway yeah. That's about it for this video! It's just

  • a little piece of tech history that I find fascinating and felt like sharing,

  • and I hope that you enjoyed taking a look as well!

  • And if you did enjoy this then cool. It's a little simpler and shorter than I

  • normally do but hopefully you enjoyed enough to maybe want to see some more.

  • And there are new videos coming out every Monday and Friday here on LGR.

  • And as always thank you very much for watching!

Greetings and welcome to an LGR thing! And today I have a smaller kind of thing,

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LGR - 原創的IBM Think Pad (LGR - The Original IBM Think Pad)

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    林宜悉 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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