Typewriter Intervention: The Brilliance of Analog Innovation in an Over-Automated World
Future-Focused with Christopher Lind · 2026-04-13 · 27 min
Episode notes
Anyone remember Mavis Beacon Teaches Typing? Yeah, well, this week you’ll need to go back even further than that. An Ivy League professor recently made headlines for forcing all of her college students to use 1950s manual typewriters in class. On the surface, it looks like a regression to the Stone Age, another stubborn overreaction to modern tech. However, while it may surprise you, I think what this professor did is actually a brilliant play. In this week’s episode of Future-Focused, I’m breaking down the brilliance behind the strategy of this analog intervention and why it is a masterclass in strategic leadership. I’ll explain how it perfectly cuts past the growing binary trap destroying organizations today, enforcing pointless friction out of fear of tech or chasing blind AI use where we let the machine do all the thinking for us. My goal is to help you move beyond this lose-lose scenario and intentionally design friction that forces cognitive pause.
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