Back in the 1970s Burma, students were taught (forced to learn) typing, shorthand, and penmanship. Upon being promoted from lower school to fifth grade, we were finally permitted to switch from pencil to fountain pen. No one in Burma used ballpoint pens, in those days. Later in engineering school, we were taught to use technical pens and calligraphy pens, which were dip-ink types.
The first #fountain #pen I learned to use in middle school was my grand father's Parker 51. It was about as basic as a fountain pen could be.
Through the decades, I have used other fountain pens from Parker, Cross, Waterman, and Pelikan. But my daily-use fountain pen is still my trusty old Parker 51, which is several years older than FORTRAN.
Ah yes, I still #write meeting notes, technical concepts, algorithm designs, etc., on paper (Japanese made) with fountain pen (Parker 51).
And no, I do not use ballpoint pens, rollerball pens, felt-tip pens, and other types of ink pens.