Despite growing up in an age where the handwritten letter was the main form of communication, Queen Elizabeth is well and truly embracing modern technology.
The Queen today shared her first Instagram post with the world, publishing a photo and long caption on the royal familyโs official Instagram account, which has a casual 4.7 million followers.
During a visit to Londonโs Science Museum, the 92-year-old used an iPad to hit send on her pre-prepared post โ a photo of a letter written to her great-great-grandfather Prince Albert in 1843.
โToday, as I visit the Science Museum I was interested to discover a letter from the Royal Archives, written in 1843 to my great-great-grandfather Prince Albert,โ she wrote in the caption.
โCharles Babbage, credited as the worldโs first computer pioneer, designed the โDifference Engineโ, of which Prince Albert had the opportunity to see a prototype in July 1843.
โIn the letter, Babbage told Queen Victoria and Prince Albert about his invention the โAnalytical Engineโ upon which the first computer programmes were created by Ada Lovelace, a daughter of Lord Byron.โ
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The post continued: โToday, I had the pleasure of learning about childrenโs computer coding initiatives and it seems fitting to me that I publish this Instagram post, at the Science Museum which has long championed technology, innovation and inspired the next generation of inventors.โ It was signed โElizabeth R,โ at the end.
While the Queen broke with her tradition to post on social media, the monarch was true to her recent fashion form of wearing bright and bold colours, decked out in a gorgeous orange coat with a matching hat for her outing.
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In a statement, a Buckingham Palace spokesman said: โThe Queen has long been a supporter of digital communications tools, and she sent her first tweet during her last visit to the Science Museum in 2014.
โIn a similar act, The Queen launched the first British Monarchy web site in 1997. Her Majesty sent her first e-mail in 1976, during an engagement at a military base.
โThere is a long association between The Queen and the Royal Family and Technology.โ
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This isnโt the first time The Queen has embraced modern technology.
She allowed television cameras inside Westminster Abbey to film her Coronation in 1953, which led to more than half a million extra TV sets being sold in the weeks leading up to the event.