>> Yo, yo, yo, what's shakin', what's shakin', what's shakin', how're you all feeling, how're you all feeling, how're you all feeling, this is Jason Reynolds. You are back at another episode of the Write Right Rite. I hope you're good, I hope you're well, I hope you're healthy, I hope you're having a fun summer. Today, I want to talk about this; this is a typewriter, right? This is, at the time when these came out, this was the most advanced piece of technology that we'd seen when it came to writing things, and typing up correspondence, and so forth and so on. It's the way that we all wrote, we had pen and pad, pen and paper, and back then a lot of people were even, we had pens, but even before then we had feather quills, which is weird, those weird feather pens you see in those old historic movies and books and stuff, with an inkwell where you dip the pen in the ink and you're like [inaudible], it's all very, [inaudible] right? And then came typewriters, right? These typewriters were a big deal, this was like having a big screen, this was like having a Mac computer, a big computer screen or whatever, this was as fancy as it got. And of course, eventually these became electric, which I happen to have a bunch of these in my house, I have an electric one in there, the first electric typewriter, and then electric typewriters became computers and word processors, right? And then those word processors became sort of, I mean now we have iPads, we have tablets, we have big laptops and small laptops, we have cell phones that we can type on and everything like that, right? But it all begins with this thing, this piece of technology. So my question to you is, if this is where we started, and now we have computers and iPhones, where are we going next? I want you to imagine the next piece of technology, the next machine, when it comes to writing. How will we be writing next? What's the next thing that we're going to be using to write? Now you can imagine whatever the future looks like, you can say that it's all going to happen in our heads. You could say we're going to be using our fingers to just like write in the air, right? Who knows, right? But think about it, use your imagination and stretch it out and write me, tell me what, where exactly we're going when it comes to the future of writing, if this was the beginning of that technology. Where are we headed? Draw a picture, write a story, write a poem, it doesn't matter, do it your way. I'd love to see what you come up with, alright? Cool. I'll talk to you all soon. And before I go, by the way, yo, tell your great, great, great, grandmother to let you see one of these, because she's got one, you know what I mean? She got one, she probably in a room right now, still typing you a letter and say it's going to be a text message, you know what I'm talking about? Alright, you all, peace.