Remington Gail Keyboard (RECENT — RELEASE)
Some say it’s a hoax. Others say Remington lawyers buried it. Probably not. The nostalgia market is fickle.
For the past few weeks, a name has been circulating quietly in vintage keyboard forums and obscure mechanical keyboard Discords: remington gail keyboard
So tonight, when you’re typing on your Cherry MX Browns or your buckling springs, pour one out for the Gail. A keyboard that was too gentle, too curved, and too expensive for its own time. Some say it’s a hoax
If you haven’t heard of it, don’t worry. For a long time, neither had we. But according to fragmented catalog scans and a single, grainy patent photo from 1989, the Remington Gail might represent one of the greatest "what ifs" in typing history. First, a reality check: Remington is no stranger to typing. They built the first commercial typewriter in 1873. By the 1980s, however, they were struggling to transition from mechanical typewriters to electronic word processors. The nostalgia market is fickle
Disclaimer: The Remington Gail is presented here as a work of speculative fiction/urban legend. There is no known commercial keyboard produced by Remington under that name. If you actually find one, call a museum immediately.
Has one ever been found? A YouTuber named "ClackPot" claimed to have found a "Gail Rev 0.2" in a barn in 2018. The video was taken down after 24 hours. The user deleted their account.
