The Origin of Uppercase and Lowercase Letters and the Influence of Typesetting Upon the English Language

The term “uppercase” and “lowercase” in relation to alphabet letters was derived during the Victorian period within England. Advertising was highly prominent during the 19th century and used ubiquitously by businesses. The poster makers who would serve these businesses would use letters which were essentially stamps, dipped into thick, viscous, oily ink, specifically formulated this way to cling to and transfer cleanly onto coarse paper which was designed to be rough so that it could absorb as much ink as possible. Compositors, which was the name for this particular vocation during the 19th century, would keep their letters in a type case with large letters at the top and small letters at the bottom. The letters were kept in what was effectively a suitcase which did not close which is where the terms “uppercase” and “lowercase” originated from, as the letters were stored in either the upper portion of the type case or the lower portion of the type case. Each individual letter, a block referred to as a “sort”, was cast in metal and crafted backward to be arranged by hand by a skilled craftsperson. The layout of the case, with capital letters in the upper section and lowercase letters in the bottom, was highly pragmatic, as it positioned the most often used letters at the bottom closer to the person setting the typeset. Interestingly, this pragmatism influenced the English language as compositors not only set letters, they also selected when to use punctuation, spacing, and line breaks, all of which shaped how text was read and understood. Because movable type requires physical pieces for every character used, punctuation was to be used deliberately as too many commas, colons, em dashes etc. meant more time spent, more metal used, and more space being taken up upon the page. This physical constraint helped standardize English punctuation use and even influenced sentence structure, encouraging clarity and economy in writing which are themes that have endured into the 21st century

Large Technology Corporations Purchasing Competition to Monopolize the Marketplace

Large technology corporations have the ability to analyze potential competitors and acquire them before they have a chance to compete. This is detrimental to consumers as it eliminates competition in the marketplace. Facebook has acquired more then 75 companies (e.g. WhatsApp, Instagram, Lightbox etc. ), Amazon has acquired more than 100 (e.g. Audible, Whole Foods, Ring etc.), and Alphabet, the umbrella organization which owns Google, has acquired more than 200 (e.g. Picasa, YouTube, Songza etc.). In 2010 and 2011, these technology juggernauts were acquiring competition at a rate of more than 1 company per week

The Etymology of American Industrialist Henry Ford’s Model T Automobile and the First Mass Produced Vehicle

Henry Ford named the iconic Model T automobile as he did because of the way he built his company. Ford started with the Model A and continued to improve the design, moving through each letter of the alphabet the way modern software changes numerically with each upgrade (eg. Model A, Model B, Model C alongside software 1.0, software 2.0, software 3.0 etc.). It was Ford’s 20th design that met his stringent personal requirements allowing the Model T to become the first mass produced vehicle in 1908