Perhaps this viewpoint also stems from the fact that typed text typically requires a machine to be properly done, (whether it be a typewriter or a computer,) because, in a way, machines are seen as being superior to the fleshy elegance of humanity. After all, we don't expect perfection of spelling or grammar in the mad scribbles of a physician, the love-notes we find wedged in the strangest (and yet always most familiar) places by our own special someone, or the handwritten letters we get from highschool students or children studying abroad. Not convinced? Consider any science fiction film or television show- the machine is always far more capable, advanced, and less likely to make mistakes than the actors. As a society, we've grown to accept this odd fact, we've almost been conditioned by various forms of media to believe that machines have been programmed not exactly to be perfect, but to be somewhat above the human mind in their analytical capacity. To err is human, as the saying goes, but we expect better from the clearly legible etches left on the amorphous walls of cyberspace by the millions upon millions of individuals that go tracking through its depths every day. After all, how hard is it to use a spellchecker, right?