Shorthand-Aided Rapid Keyboarding 22
An anonymous reader writes "IBM's famous reseach lab for nanotechnology, micoelectronics and exotic science, Almaden Research Center, has released an advanced, efficient, pen-based text input method for mobile computing, that allows you to trace letters on the keyboard to enter a word rather than typing each letter individually. The new technology provides a more fluid, smooth, and natural interaction (see demo ) than tapping on stylus keyboards."
Re:I would have to try it to know if I would like (Score:4, Insightful)
I can't see myself memorizing too many words over 5 letters though, even after repeated use. They tend to just look like random scribbling.
Re:I would have to try it to know if I would like (Score:4, Insightful)
That is the beauty of SHARK. You'll eventually be able enter a word pattern, rather than focus on where the letters are.
Re:I would have to try it to know if I would like (Score:2)
So, like, I could just use the word, "crappy" as a 6-letter adjective rather than, say, "superfluous"? Saves letters, time and thought, must be good!
Always remember and never forget: eschew obfuscation.
Re:I would have to try it to know if I would like (Score:5, Interesting)
Well, typing just looks like random pecking in a grid. You may never really be able to memorize these intentionally, but the brain and musle memory are much better at learning habits than you would think. It's just a matter of time and repetition.
Re:I would have to try it to know if I would like (Score:1)
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Funny how few secretaries I've heard make the same complaint about traditional shorthand...
Re:I would have to try it to know if I would like (Score:4, Interesting)
It looks great to me. The only thing is that the 'keyboard' map they used is really oriented towards english and is different from the good old qwerty everyone is used to. As a native french speaker, I really wonder how quick it is to use for common words.
It sure looks faster than current grafiti on palms and it has visual feedback. I'm just bad at hand writing, and slow on a palm. This might be what I need.
Re:I would have to try it to know if I would like (Score:2)
Need to learn to write another language (Score:4, Informative)
With an acronym like SHARK, it's got to be good!
Also, words like, "mnemonic", "sokgraph", "algorithms" and "morphed" guarantee a high geek-Q.
Unfortunately, another geek/teen-popular word is "random".
Oh bother... (Score:4, Funny)
Dvorak? (Score:1)
The only way I could see it gaining widespread use is via Palm-style devices. There you have a market where people are willing to try things other than a QWERTY keyboard. Maybe it could then move from the palmtop platform to the desktop.
Re:Dvorak? (Score:2, Informative)
I know you're going to get slaughtered for the above, which is a shame because you make a reasonable point but with a bad example. Anyway, I know this is heading offtopic but it comes up a lot on Slashdot. Let me be the first to say:
Dvorak is NOT better than Qwerty.
The original studies that 'proved' the superiority of Dvorak were conducted by none other than Mr Dvorak himself! The tests were repeatedly and ridiculously unfair, in that they compared groups of typists who could never be reasonably compa
This looks incredible to me. (Score:1)
It also doesn't seem like the layout would mess with your QWERTY skills as your brain as I get the feeling your brain is in a different kind of mode when moving a pen around a display vs moving your fingers around on a keyboard.
Good stuff!
Keyboard still better (Score:1)
This continuous drift towards 'alternative' input methods on the part of the OS vendors (read: Microsoft) seems mistaken from my desktop-bound existence.
Don't even get me started on Microsoft's MixedUp keyboards. The moment any keyboard manufacturer starts playing with the function block (Insert / Delete and friends), they lose my business for one.
Balloon (Score:1)
Re:Balloon (Score:1)
The same situation would come up in the case of a word like "can" where all three letters are in a line. How would it know to pick up the letter "a" in the middle? Perhaps it runs the letters selected vs a word database, translating "cn" into "can".
Re:Balloon (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Balloon (Score:1)
It isn't always reliable, as obviously stated above. But then again, if you are such a geek to use this, would you even have a female relationship as such?
Dictionary=Bad (Score:2, Interesting)
ream ember tea probe lamb with the Apple Newton?
Dictionary systems always look great in a demo, but the great advantage of Grafitti-like systems like on the Palms is that you can type anything and it works even if its not in the dictionary!
Re:Dictionary=Bad (Score:2)