@Dirk-B
Quote:
Dirk-B wrote:
@GregS
For me a touch screen with configurable keyboard would
be the best choice towards the future i think.
Lets say i want to type alot of flemish words, and you want
to type alot of english words. If we would put the most used
letters on the top or in the middle of the keyboard then that
would speed up our typing. Yes of cource we would need to
learn these new keyboards and adapt to the changes.
There is an inherent problem with keying, as against controlling by keys. The touch screen is great for controls, but for typing there is no tactile response, and moving fingers about in order to type, takes a lot of time to become proficient and is inherently slow.
What we plan is a freely configurable system. In Flemish the most used letters will be different to English, but as a bilingual writer you may prefer doing key placement in your mother tongue.
Some positions (ours is harmonic based) are primary, best suited for the most used letters and punctuation, secondary, third and fourth placed options, are also helped by keyset shifts, where special, mathematical and other typefaces can be moved in and out.
The critical point is visual coordination between letter choices and what is actually being typed, ideally this should be presented in the textline so that you are looking at what you are typing.
Quote:
Paul wrote:
@GregS
I haven't even tried to do more than enter phone numbers, names, etc. into my phone with the phone pad. You're right. It's really a pain.
Just recently I started using a Palm Z22 wtih Graffiti 2 software. I'm not terribly fast at entering text with Graffiti, but it's coming along. It's fairly intuitive, and I think could provide for some fairly quick text entry once one is used to it.
If I remember rightly Graffiti is a gesture based system, and it can be used as a proxy shorthand, but it takes time to learn and can be frustrating teaching it as well as the user - this is inherent in most gesture systems (Quicktype being an exception).
The trick is to take the eyes away from what the hand is doing, allowing the letters to be typed like a musical instrument is played - some tests on similar systems have relative novices typing faster than stenographers.