'Handwriting a lost art'? Zoho's Rs 50,000 cr man's fear sparks fiery internet debate

A debate sparked online after Zoho founder Sridhar Vembu questioned the future of handwriting. Some believe digital tools may make handwriting obsolete. Others passionately defend handwriting, citing its importance for learning and memory. Many st...

Zoho's Sridhar Vembu recalls an incident where he could not read an 'illegible' handwriting and feared if this art is fading away. (Agencies/Istock)
Is handwriting on its last legs? That’s the question that lit up the internet after Zoho’s billionaire founder, Sridhar Vembu, shared his struggle with putting pen to paper. The tech boss, worth nearly Rs 50,000 crore, admitted that not only did he receive a handwritten note so illegible he couldn’t read it, but he himself finds it tough to write neatly. His remark that handwriting may soon become a “lost art” struck a chord — and a nerve — online.


Internet reacts

While many agreed with Vembu, pointing out how rarely they write on paper anymore, others took the conversation a step further. Some users predicted that even the keyboard could become obsolete in the future. They imagined a world where thoughts are transmitted directly, uncompressed and at lightning speed, through brain-computer interfaces or ultra-advanced speech typing, making traditional writing skills redundant.


But not everyone was convinced by this futuristic vision. A wave of responses came from people fiercely defending the act of writing by hand. Some shared how they still use blue gel pens and blank sheets, enjoying the clarity of switching between Roman and Devanagari scripts. Others insisted they couldn’t learn or remember things without writing them down, arguing that while tools may change — from notebooks to iPads — the practice of writing itself would endure.

Some users admitted that while handwriting has become rare, they still make a conscious effort to use pen and paper, calling it an art form worth preserving. Others shared that despite the convenience of typing, they continue to jot down daily notes by hand because it helps them process information better. A few even reflected on how the shift to keyboards and touchscreens has affected memory, recalling a time when they could easily remember dozens of phone numbers simply because they wrote them down.



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Many suggested simply uploading a photo of the handwritten note to an LLM, which they claimed can decode it with up to 95% accuracy.
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