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Newsgroups: sci.med,sci.med.occupational,comp.human-factors,comp.answers,sci.answers,news.answers
Path: bloom-beacon.mit.edu!hookup!news.moneng.mei.com!howland.reston.ans.net!wupost!gumby!yale!yale.edu!newsserver.jvnc.net!nntpserver.pppl.gov!princeton!kastle!dwallach
From: Dan Wallach <dwallach@cs.princeton.edu>
Subject: FAQ: Typing Injuries (3/5): Keyboard Alternatives [monthly posting]
Content-Type: text/x-usenet-FAQ;
version=1.0;
title="Typing Injury FAQ: (3/5) Keyboard alternatives"
Message-ID: <typing-injury-faq/keyboards_764035223@cs.princeton.edu>
Followup-To: sci.med.occupational
Summary: everything you ever wanted to know about replacing your keyboard
Originator: news@nimaster
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Reply-To: Dan Wallach <dwallach@cs.princeton.edu>
Organization: Princeton University
Date: Sat, 19 Mar 1994 00:01:17 GMT
Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
Expires: Wed, 27 Apr 1994 00:00:23 GMT
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Xref: bloom-beacon.mit.edu sci.med:36234 sci.med.occupational:1261 comp.human-factors:4985 comp.answers:4225 sci.answers:994 news.answers:16556
Archive-name: typing-injury-faq/keyboards
Version: $Revision: 6.18 $ $Date: 1994/03/18 23:55:39 $
Prologue
--------
This FAQ may be cited as:
Wallach, Dan S. (1994) "Typing Injury FAQ: Keyboard
Alternatives" Usenet news.answers. Available via anonymous ftp from
rtfm.mit.edu in pub/usenet/news.answers/typing-injury-faq/keyboards.
14 pages.
World-Wide-Web users will find this available as hypertext:
http://www.cis.ohio-state.edu/hypertext/faq/usenet/typing-injury-faq/top.html
(Dan Wallach's page) http://www.cs.princeton.edu/grad/Dan_Wallach/top.html
Answers To Frequently Asked Questions about Keyboard Alternatives
-----------------------------------------------------------------
Copyright 1992-1994 By Dan Wallach <dwallach@cs.princeton.edu>
The opinions in here are my own, unless otherwise mentioned, and do not
represent the opinions of any organization or vendor.
[Current distribution: sci.med.occupational, sci.med, comp.human-factors,
{news,sci,comp}.answers, and e-mail to c+health@iubvm.ucs.indiana.edu,
sorehand@vm.ucsf.edu, and cstg-L@vtvm1.cc.vt.edu]
Changes since previously distributed versions are marked with change ||
bars to the right of the text, as is this paragraph. ||
Information in this FAQ has been pieced together from phone conversations,
e-mail, and product literature. While I hope it's useful, the information
in here is neither comprehensive nor error free. If you find something
wrong or missing, please mail me, and I'll update my list. Thanks.
All phone numbers, unless otherwise mentioned, are U.S.A. phone numbers.
All monetary figures, unless otherwise mentioned, are U.S.A. dollars.
Products covered in this FAQ:
Using a PC's keyboard on your workstation / compatibility issues
("normal" keyboards -- by normal, I really mean non-chording)
Apple Computer, Inc.
Comfort Keyboard System
DataHand
ergoLogic
Ergo Max
FlexPro (Key Tronic)
Fountain Hills Systems
Kinesis Ergonomic Keyboard
The MyKey
Maltron
MiniErgo (Marquardt Switches)
Somers EK1 Ergonomic Keyboard
The Tony! Ergonomic KeySystem
The Vertical
The Wave
("chording" systems / speech recognizers / other products)
AccuKey
The Bat (Infogrip)
Braille 'n Speak (Blaize)
DataEgg (InHand Development)
DragonDictate (Dragon Systems)
Half-QWERTY
IBM Speech Server Series (ISSS) / Personal Dictation System (PDS)
IBM VoiceType 2
IN3 Voice Command / IN3 PRO
Kurzweil VOICE
Microwriter
The Minimal Motion Computer Access System
Octima
Twiddler
Voice Navigator
GIF pictures of many of these products are available via anonymous ftp
from soda.berkeley.edu:/pub/typing-injury. (128.32.149.19) I highly
recommend getting the pictures. They tell much more than I can fit
into this file.
If you can't ftp, send me mail, and I'll uuencode and mail them to you
(they're pretty big...)
Using a PC's keyboard on your workstation / compatibility issues
----------------------------------------------------------------
1) Spoofing a keyboard over the serial port
If you've got a proprietary computer which uses its own keyboard
(Sun, HP, DEC, etc.) then you're going to have a hard time finding
a vendor to sell you a compatible keyboard. If your workstation
runs the X window system, you're in luck. You can buy a cheap used
PC, hook your expensive keyboard up to it, and run a serial cable
to your workstation. Then, run a program on the workstation to read
the serial port and generate fake X keyboard events.
A number of programs can facilitate this for you. kt and a2x
support ASCII input. a2x-RawPC and serkey support raw PC scancode
input. Also, the new version of kt (kt18) additionally supports
raw PC scancodes.
a2x is a sophisticated program, capable of controlling the mouse,
and even moving among widgets on the screen. It requires a server
extension (XTEST, DEC-XTRAP, or XTestExtension1). To find out if
your server can do this, run 'xdpyinfo' and see if any of these
strings appear in the extensions list. If your server doesn't
have this, you may want to investigate compiling X11R5, patchlevel
18 or later, or bugging your vendor.
kt is a simpler program, which should work with unextended X
servers. Another program called xsendevent also exists, but I
haven't seen it.
a2x-RawPC, serkey, and kt18 can take input from a device such as the
Genovation Serial Box which converts a PC keyboard into a normal
RS232 serial device, but otherwise passes through the raw PC
scancodes. This approach has several advantages: a Serial Box is
only $150, whereas the cheapest used PC you may ever find is over
$300. A Serial Box could easily fit in your pocket, while PC's
tend to be much bigger. Most important, however, is the ability
to use *all* the keys of your PC keyboard with your workstation,
like the function keys.
a2x, a2x-RawPC, serkey and kt are all available via anonymous ftp
from soda.berkeley.edu.
Genovation can be contacted at:
17741 Mitchell North
Irvine, CA 92714, U.S.A.
Voice: 714-833-3355
Fax: 714-833-0322
Apparently, you can also find it for $94+shipping from a mail order
company called "United Computer Express", at 800-448-3738.
Kinesis is also reselling the Genovation boxes under their
own label.
Warning: apparently, the Genovation serial box doesn't work with
the Maltron keyboard.
2) Macintosh
Kinesis Corp. now has an adapter to make a PC keyboard connect to ||
a Macintosh. They'll happily sell you the adapter without one ||
of their keyboards. This is brand new, so they haven't firmed ||
up a price, yet. Call for details: 206-455-9220. ||
3) X terminals
Also, a number of X terminals (NCD, Tektronix, to name a few) use
PC-compatible keyboards. If you have an X terminal, you may be all
set. Try it out with a normal PC keyboard before you go through the
trouble of buying an alternative keyboard. Also, some X terminals add
extra buttons -- you may need to keep your original keyboard around
for the once-in-a-blue-moon that you have to hit the Setup key.
4) NeXT
NeXT had announced that new NeXT machines will use the Apple Desktop
Bus, meaning any Mac keyboard will work. Then, they announced they
were cancelling their hardware production. If you want any kind of
upgrade for an older NeXT, do it now!
5) Silicon Graphics
Silicon Graphics has announced that their newer machines (Indigo^2 and
beyond) will use standard PC-compatible keyboards and mice. I don't
believe this also applies to the Power Series machines. It's not
possible to upgrade an older SGI to use PC keyboards, except by
upgrading the entire machine. Contact your SGI sales rep for more
details.
6) IBM RS/6000
IBM RS/6000 keyboards are actually similar to normal PC keyboards.
Unfortunately, you can't just plug one in. You need two things: a
cable converter to go from the large PC keyboard connector to the
smaller PS/2 style DIN-6, and a new device driver for AIX. Believe
it or not, IBM wrote this device driver recently, I used it, and it
works. However, they don't want me to redistribute it. I've been
told Judy Hume (512) 823-6337 is a potential contact. If you learn
anything new, please send me e-mail.
Several people have reported problems contacting IBM on this
issue. Be sure to bug your sales rep into doing the research.
Again, let me know if you learn anything new.
7) HP workstations
If you are using an HP workstation, you can buy a converter
box that converts the HP-HIL serial to PS2. The converter is
made by Modular Industrial Computers 615-499-0700.
8) Other stuff
Some vendors here (notably: Health Care Keyboard Co. and AccuCorp)
support some odd keyboard types, and may be responsive to your
queries regarding supporting your own weird computer. If you can
get sufficient documention about how your keyboard works (either
from the vendor, or with a storage oscilloscope), you may be in
luck. Contact the companies for more details.
"Normal" keyboards -- things that look like "standard" QWERTY keyboards
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
GIF pictures of many of these keyboards can be found via anonymous FTP
soda.berkeley.edu:/pub/typing-injury/gifs
1) Apple Adjustable Keyboard
Apple Computer, Inc.
Sales offices all over the place.
Price: $219 (some dealers have it for less)
Shipping: Now.
Supports: Mac
Apple's keyboard has one section for each hand, and the sections
rotate backward on a hinge. The sections do not tilt upward. The
keys are arranged in a normal QWERTY fashion.
The main foldable keyboard resembles a normal Apple Keyboard.
A separate keypad contains all the extended key functions.
The keyboard also comes with matching wrist rests, which are not
directly attachable to the keyboard.
Many peripheral keys, such as function keys, are "chicklet" keys, rather
than full size, normal keyboard keys.
(See the files apple-press and apple-tidbits on the soda.berkeley.edu
archive for more details)
2) Comfort Keyboard System
Phone: 414-253-4131
Fax: 414-253-4177
Health Care Keyboard Company
N82 W15340 Appleton Ave
Menomonee Falls, Wisconsin 53051 U.S.A.
Jeffrey Szmanda (Vice President -- contact)
Price: $795, includes one "personality" module
Shipping: Now.
Supports: PC (and Mac???)
Planned future support:
IBM 122-key layout (3270-style, I believe)
Sun Sparc
Decision Data
Unisys UTS-40
Silicon Graphics
Others to be supported later. The hardware design is relatively
easy for the company to re-configure.
The idea is that one keyboard works with everything. You purchase
"compatibility modules", a new cord, and possibly new keycaps, and
then you can move your one keyboard around among different machines.
It's a three-piece folding keyboard. The layout resembles the
standard 101-key keyboard, except sliced into three sections. Each
section is on a "custom telescoping universal mount." Each section
independently adjusts to an infinite number of positions allowing each
individual to type in a natural posture. You can rearrange the three
sections, too (have the keypad in the middle if you want). Each
section is otherwise normal-shaped (i.e.: you put all three sections
flat, and you have what looks like a normal 101-key keyboard).
3) DataHand
Phone: 602-860-8584
Industrial Innovations, Inc.
10789 North 90th Street
Scottsdale, Arizona 85260-6727, U.S.A.
Mark Roggenbuck (contact)
Price: $2000/unit (1 unit == 2 pods). Lease options available.
Shipping: Now. (Expect it to take about a month)
Supports: PC and Mac
Each hand has its own "pod". Each of the four main fingers has five
switches each: forward, back, left, right, and down. The thumbs have
a number of switches. Despite appearances, the key layout resembles
QWERTY, and is reported to be no big deal to adapt to. The idea is
that your hands never have to move to use the keyboard. The whole pod
tilts in its base, to act as a mouse.
If you ask, they'll send you a 15 minute video tape, too.
(see also: the detailed review, written by Cliff Lasser <cal@THINK.COM>
soda.berkeley.edu:/pub/typing-injury/datahand-review)
4) ergoLogic Model 7.1
Phone: 800-ONLY-WAY
FAX: 604-433-0111
ErgoLogic Enterprises, Inc.
47000 Warm Springs Blvd, Unit 430
Fremont, CA 94539-7467
(See "FlexPro Keyboard")
Price: $399 (but, I've heard $489 for the FlexPro. Go figure.)
Supports: PC
Shipping: March, 1994
ErgoLogic has licensed their keyboard to Key Tronic, which is how
you're more likely to see one of their keyboards. Both keyboards
are manufactured in the same facility, and are exactly the same,
except for the label in the upper left corner.
5) Ergo Max
Phone: 602-294-5450
Maxi Switch, Inc.
Price: $99 + $19.95 for a separate 40-key keypad
Supports: PC
Shipping: 2Q94 (maybe)
Each half of the main keyboard can be independently raised/angled.
No other information available, as of this posting, but they promised
to send me pictures and promotional literature.
6) FlexPro Keyboard
Phone: 800-262-6006
Possible contact: Denise Razzeto, 509-927-5299
Key Tronic
(See "ergoLogic Model 7.1")
Sold by many clone vendors and PC shops
Price: $489 (?)
Shipping: March, 1994
Supports: PC
Keytronic apparently showed a prototype keyboard at Comdex. It's
another split-design. One thumb-wheel controls the tilt of both
the left and right-hand sides of the main alphanumeric section.
The arrow keys and keypad resemble a normal 101-key PC keyboard.
Keytronic makes standard PC keyboards, also, so this product will
probably be sold through their standard distribution channels.
Keytronic is working together with ErgoLogic Enterprises on this,
so it's the same keyboard.
7) Fountain Hills FH-101
Phone: 602-596-8633
Fountain Hills Systems
15022 North 75th St.
Scottsdale, AZ 85260-2476
Price: $349 with quantity discounts
Shipping: ???
Supports: PC
The Fountain Hills keyboard is set at a 20 degree fixed angle for
each hand. The keyboard is still flat (i.e.: not higher in the middle)
and has no adjustments.
8) Kinesis Ergonomic Keyboard
Phone: 206-455-9220
Fax: 206-455-9233
Kinesis Corporation
915 118th Ave. SE.
Bellevue, Washington 98005, U.S.A.
Shirley Lunde (VP Marketing -- contact)
Price: $390. Volume discounts available. This includes adhesive
wrist pads and a TypingTutor program. Foot pedals and other
accessories are extra.
Supports: PC. Mac and Sun Sparc in the works.
Shipping: Now.
The layout has a large blank space in the middle, even though the
keyboard is about the size of a normal PC keyboard -- slightly
smaller. Each hand has its own set of keys, laid out to minimize
finger travel. Thumb buttons handle many major functions (enter,
backspace, etc.).
You can remap the keyboard in firmware (very nice when software won't
allow the reconfig).
Foot pedals are also available, and can be mapped to any key on the
keyboard (shift, control, whatever).
The keypad is "embedded" in the right hand, and a toggle button
(or foot pedal) changes between normal and keypad mode for your
right hand.
Software is newly available that lets you split the Kinesis into
multiple personalities so you can have more than one set of macros
and remappings available. This software runs on your PC and downloads
the data to the keyboard. For more info, contact the company.
Kinesis has a prototype adapter to use the keyboard on HP workstations.
Again, for more info, contact the company.
9) Maltron
Phone: (+44) 081 398 3265 (United Kingdom)
P.C.D. Maltron Limited
15 Orchard Lane
East Molesey
Surrey KT8 OBN
England
Pamela and Stephen Hobday (contacts)
U.S. Distributor:
Jim Barrett
Applied Learning Corp.
1376 Glen Hardie Road
Wayne, PA 19087
Phone: 215-688-6866
Canadian Distributor:
Robert Vellinga
Human Systems, Inc.
310 Main Street East, Suite 205
Milton, Ontario, L9T 1P4
Phone: 416-875-0220
Fax: 416-878-1683
Price: 375 pounds
$790 + shipping in the U.S.A.
They have a number of accessories, including carrying cases,
switch boxes to use both your normal keyboard and the Maltron,
an articulated arm that clamps on to your table, and training
'courses' to help you learn to type on your Maltron.
You can also rent a keyboard for 10 pounds/week + taxes.
U.S. price: $120/month, and then $60 off purchase if you want it.
Shipping: Now (in your choice of colors: black or grey)
Supports: PC's, Mac, Amstrad 1512/1640.
Maltron has four main products -- a two-handed keyboard, two one-handed
keyboards, and a keyboard designed for handicapped people to control with
a mouth-stick.
The layout allocates more buttons to the thumbs, and is curved to
bring keys closer to the fingers. A separate keypad is in the middle.
The newer Maltrons have a different layout than the pictures on soda.
Function keys, tab, and some other secondary keys have been rearranged.
The shift keys are now larger, also.
10) MiniErgo
Phone: 315-655-8050
Fax: 315-655-8042
Marquardt Switches Inc.
2711 Route 20 East
Cazenovia, New York 13035
Robert Philipchik -- contact
Price: $179 for MiniErgo, $125 for external numeric keypad.
Shipping: now
Supports: PC
The MiniErgo is a split keyboard system with no numeric keypad
(keypad available separately in August). The two halves are
fixed at about a 30 degree angle, to approximate the angle of
your arms when you hands are in QWERTY home position. The slant
is approximately same as standard 101-key keyboard. They've
moved the cursor controls into the gap between the two halves. A
Fn key is used to access an embedded keypad and PgUp,PgDn,Home,
and End.
11) The MyKey
Phone: 703-771-1047
Fax: 703-771-1137
E-Mail: 75050.3323@compuserve.com
ErgonomiXX, Inc.
525-K Est Market Street
Box 295
Leesburg, VA 22071
Price: $275 ||
Shipping: now (may also be in some CompUSA stores, stock # 289-554) ||
Supports: PC ||
The MyKey has the full 101 keys of a normal PC keyboard plus an ||
integrated trackball pointing device and integrated wrist rests. ||
The main alpha-numeric keys are split at a fixed angle, with the ||
normal PC layout. The function keys appear in a circle on the ||
left, with the arrow keys inside them. ||
12) Somers EK1 Ergonomic Keyboard
Phone: 805-273-1609
E-Mail: RSomers@aol.com (Richard Somers)
Somers Engineering
3424 Vicker Way
Palmdale, CA 93551
Price: $348 + shipping
Supports: PC and Mac (at the same time! see below)
Shipping: "in limited quantities"
A trackball module is also available ($100), which can clip on the side
or replace the cursor keypad.
The keyboard is broken down into three modules which can be re-
arranged. (the keypad could be put on the left, for example).
The alphanumeric keys are vertical rather than the usual diagonal
arrangement.
The keyboard is based on the Datadesk Switchboard -- Somers just
developed a new keyboard module for it. Thus, they take advantage
of the Switchboard's PC and Mac compatibility. You can't plug
it into both at the same time, but you need only use the right
cable, and tweak some DIP switches to change the keyboard's
personality.
13) The Tony! Ergonomic KeySystem
Phone: 415-969-8669 (I'm told this is no longer valid, though)
Tony Hodges
The Tony! Corporation
2332 Thompson Court
Mountain View, CA 94043, U.S.A.
Price: $625 (you commit now, and then you're in line to buy the
keyboard. When it ships, if it's cheaper, you pay the cheaper price.
If it's more expensive, you still pay $625)
Supports: Mac, PC, IBM 3270, Sun, and DEC.
Shipping: ???
The Tony! should allow separate positioning of every key, to allow
the keyboard to be personally customized. A thumb-operated mouse
will also be available.
14) The Vertical
Phone: 619-454-0000
Jeffrey Spencer or Stephen Albert
P.O. Box 2636
La Jolla, CA 92038, U.S.A.
Price: $299
Supports: no info available, probably PC's
Shipping: ???
The Vertical Keyboard is split in two halves, each pointing straight up.
The user can adjust the width of the device, but not the tilt of each
section. Side-view mirrors are installed to allow users to see their
fingers on the keys.
15) The Wave
Phone: 310-644-6100
Fax: 310-644-6068
Iocomm International Technology
12700 Yukon Avenue
Hawthorne, California 90250, U.S.A.
Robin Hunter (contact -- in sales)
Price: $99.95 + $15 for a set of cables
Supports: PC
Shipping: now.
Iocomm also manufactures "ordinary" 101-key keyboard (PC/AT) and
84-key keyboard (PC/XT), so make sure you get the right one.
The one-piece keyboard has a built-in wrist-rest. It looks *exactly*
like a normal 101-key PC keyboard, with two inches of built-in wrist
rest. The key switch feel is reported to be greatly improved.
Chording keyboards / speech recognizers / other products
--------------------------------------------------------
GIF pictures of many of these keyboards can be found via anonymous FTP
soda.berkeley.edu:/pub/typing-injury/gifs
1) AccuKey
703-961-2001 (Larry Langley -- President)
AccuCorp, Inc.
P.O. Box 66
Christiansburg, VA 24073, U.S.A.
Price: $495 + shipping. 60 day lease for $35.
Shipping: Now.
Supports: PC, Mac, IBM 3270, Sun Sparc, and TeleVideo 935 and 955.
Doesn't use conventional push-keys. Soft rubber keys, which rock
forward and backward (each key has three states), make chords for
typing keys. Learning time is estimated to be 2-3 hours, for getting
started, and maybe two weeks to get used to it.
Currently, the thumbs don't do anything, although a thumb-trackball
is in the works.
The company claims it takes about a week of work to support a
new computer. They will be happy to adapt their keyboard to
your computer, if possible.
2) The Bat
Infogrip, Inc.
Phone: 800-397-0921 or maybe 805-566-1049 ||
1145 Eugenia Place, Suite 201 ||
Carpinteria, CA 93013 ||
Ward Bond (main contact)
David Vicknair (did the Unix software)
Price:
$495 (dual set -- each one is a complete keyboard by itself)
$295 (single)
(cheaper prices were offered at MacWorld Expo as a show-special.)
Shipping: Now.
Supports: Mac, IBM PC (serial port -- native keyboard port version
coming very soon...). No other workstations supported, but serial
support for Unix with X Windows has been written. PC and Mac are
getting all the real attention from the company.
A chording system. One hand is sufficient to type everything.
The second hand is for redundancy and increased speed.
30 day money back guarantee, no questions asked.
3) Braille 'n Speak
Phone: 301-879-4944
Blazie Engineering
3660 Mill Green Rd.
Street, Md 21154, U.S.A.
(information provided by Doug Martin <martin@nosc.mil>)
The Braille N Speak uses any of several Braille codes for entering
information: Grade I, Grade II, or computer Braille. Basically,
letters a-j are combinations of dots 1, 2, 4, and 5. Letters k-t are
the same combinations as a-j with dot 3 added. Letters u, v, x, y, and
z are like a-e with dots 3 and 6 added. (w is unique because Louis
Braille didn't have a w in the French alphabet.)
4) DataEgg
InHand Development Group
10330 Sepulveda Blvd. Suite 140
Mission Hills, CA 91345, U.S.A.
E-Mail: garyf@puente.Jpl.Nasa.Gov
Price: $150
Shipping: First Quarter, 1994.
Supports: see below
The DataEgg is a round, one-handed, chording computer with a two-line
LCD display (similar to the Microwriter AgendA). It can also serve
as an alternative computer keyboard through a computer's serial port
(currently supporting the PC, although it wouldn't be too hard to
support X or a Mac if they wrote the driver). InHand will be
manufacturing the device, which was originally developed by Gary
Friedman of JPL.
Mr. Friedman's phone number: 818-354-1220
I don't have a phone number for InHand.
More info is available in NASA Tech Briefs, December 1992,
Newsweek's "Technology Supplement" of December 12, 1992,
or EE Times, March 8, 1993.
5) DragonDictate
Phone: 800-TALK-TYP or 617-965-5200
Fax: 617-527-0372
E-Mail: support@dragonsys.com
Dragon Systems, Inc.
320 Nevada Street
Newton, MA 02160
Prices:
DragonDictate Starter $695 ||
(5k word active vocab,1K global macro,.5K app specific macros) ||
DragonDictate Classic $995 ||
(30K active vocab, 5K global macro,2K app specific macros) ||
DragonDictate Power $1995 ||
(15K,30K,45K,60K word active vocab,5K global macro,2K app ||
specific macros) ||
Upgrade prices from older version are also available. ||
Shipping: Now.
Compatibility: 486/33 (or higher) recommended PC only ||
(3rd party support for Mac)
Free software support for X windows is also available -- your
PC with Dragon hardware talks to your workstation over a
serial cable or network. The program is called a2x, and is
available via anonymous ftp:
soda.berkeley.edu:/pub/typing-injury/a2x.tar.Z
ftp.x.org:/contrib/a2x.tar.Z (most current)
(NOTE: export.lcs.mit.edu is no longer the home of X software.
You should do your ftp's to ftp.x.org)
If you want to use your Dragon product with X windows, you may want
to ask for Peter Cohen, an salesman at Dragon who knows more about
this sort of thing.
Dragon Systems sells a number of voice recognition products.
Most (if not all) of them seem to run on PC's and compatibles
(including PS/2's and other MicroChannel boxes). They sell you
a hardware board and software which sits in front of a number
of popular word processors and spreadsheets.
Each user `trains' the system to their voice, and there are provisions
to correct the system when it makes mistakes, on the fly. Multiple
people can use it, but you have to load a different personality file
for each person. You still get the use of your normal keyboard, too.
On the DragonDictate Classic, you need to pause 1/10th sec between
words. Dragon claims typical input speeds of 30-40 words per minute.
Dragon's technology is also part of the following products
(about which I have no other info):
Microsoft Windows Sound System (Voice Pilot)
IBM VoiceType
Voice Navigator II (by Articulate Systems -- for Macintosh)
EMStation (by Lanier Voice Products -- "emergency medical workstation")
6) Half-QWERTY
Phone: 416-749-3124 (Canada)
FAX: 416-740-4132
The Matias Corporation
178 Thistledown Boulevard
Rexdale, Ontario, Canada
M9V 1K1
E-mail: ematias@dgp.toronto.edu
Demo for anonymous ftp: explorer.dgp.toronto.edu:/pub/Half-QWERTY
Price: $129.95 (higher in Canada, quantity discounts available)
Shipping: Now.
Supports: Mac and PC (but, not Windows)
This thing is purely software. No hardware at all.
The software will mirror the keyboard when you hold down the space
bar, allowing you type one-handed.
7) IBM Speech Server Series (ISSS) / Personal Dictation System (PDS)
IBM Corporation.
Phone: Contact your IBM sales rep or call 800-TALK-2ME
ISSS and PDS are built around the same technology. ISSS uses an
IBM RS/6000 and PDS uses any PC running OS/2.
Price: ISSS: Starts around $5000 for a stand-alone system
PDS: $499 Software and microphone
$499 ISA card
$579 Microchannel card
Shipping: Now.
ISSS/PDS supports a 30,000 word dictionary. It's speaker-dependent,
so requires training (1-2 hours).
ISSS/PDS recognize US and UK English, French, German, Spanish and Italian.
ISSS/PDS can control any X or OS/2 application, and supports user-
customizable profiles for macros. A developer's API is also available.
Dictation rates of 70-100 words per minute are possible with 95-99
percent accuracy, including a model of the language to disambiguate
words such as "to", "two", and "too".
IBM also makes some voice products not really intended for the
"handicap" market with continuous speech and smaller vocubularies.
Call them for more details.
8) IBM VoiceType 2
IBM Corporation.
Phone: 1-800-TALK-TYP (Dragon Systems) or
1-800-426-2968 (IBM Catalog orders)
Cost: $2195
Shipping: now
IBM VoiceType is essentially a repackaged Dragon product. It has
an active dictionary of 7000 words and a "backup" dictionary of
100k words.
This product is essentially obsoleted by newer IBM and Dragon ||
offerings, so you probably don't want it. ||
9) IN3 (in-cube) Voice Command
Voice: 404-925-7950
Fax: 404-925-7924
Command Corp, Inc.
3675 Crestwood Parkway
P.O. Box 956099
Duluth, GA 30136-9502, U.S.A.
E-Mail: in3@gacc.atl.ga.us
Contact: Brantley Kelly <cbk@gacc.atl.ga.us>
Platforms: Sun Sparc (SunOS or Solaris) and MS Windows 3.1.
Price: Sun: $495, without microphone, available separately for $195 ||
(ask for IN3 Pro, not Voice Command) ||
MS Windows: $179 (Voice Command) or $395 (IN3 Pro) ||
(IN3 Pro for MS Windows includes a microphone) ||
For Sun, IN3 provides a complete navigation solution, including
voice macros. A developer API is also available. The native Sparc
audio is used for input. IN3 can be found on Sun's Catalyst CDware.
For MS Windows, IN3 provides a solution similar to the Sun. Most 8 and
16 bit audio cards are supported. A developer API is also available.
Windows 3.1 and a 386 or better processor are required. Demos can be
found on Compuserve, America On-Line, and various comp.binaries.ms-windows
archive site and BBS systems.
For typing-injured users, they recommend the IN3 Pro product, rather ||
than the cheaper Voice Command. ||
10) Kurzweil VOICE
Phone: 617-893-5151
Fax: 617-893-6525
Kurzweil Applied Intelligence, Inc.
411 Waverley Oaks Road
Waltham MA 02154
Contact: Joe Murphy
Cost: $3000 + $750 for "support"
Shipping: now
The Kurzweil system is a voice recognition system which interfaces with
PC compatibles. You get a board which will support 50,000 words -- 10K
user defined and 40K from a 200K word dictionary. The system is reported
to attempt speaker-independence through continuously adapting voice
models. This requires about 12 mbytes of disk space to store its state,
however.
MS-DOS is supported. Windows is not, as yet. Requires 486DX/33
or better with at least 32 MBytes RAM.
11) Microwriter AgendA
Phone: (+44) 81 715 1023 (U.K.) (voice or FAX)
Microwriter Services Ltd
Unit 1
Seaforth Works
Rear of 8-12 Seaforth Avenue
New Malden
Surrey KT3 6JP
(Info from Carroll Morgan <Carroll.Morgan@prg.oxford.ac.uk>)
The AgendA is a personal desktop assistant (PDA) style machine. You
can carry it along with you. It has chording input. You can also
hook it up to your PC, or even program it.
It costs just under 200 pounds, with 128K memory.
[Apparently Microwriter is in some form of bankruptcy right now.
The DataEgg is somehow based on this. You may want to contact
InHand for more information.]
12) The Minimal Motion Computer Access System
Phone: 508-263-6437
Fax: 508-263-6537
Equal Access Computer Technology
Dr. Michael Weinreigh
39 Oneida Rd.
Acton, MA 01720, U.S.A.
Price: InfoGrip-compatible: "a few hundred dollars" + a one-handed Bat
For their own system: $300 (DOS software) + "a few hundred dollars"
Shipping: these are custom-made, so an occupational therapist would
make moulds/do whatever to make it for you. You can buy one now.
Supports: PC only, although the InfoGrip-compatible version might
work with a Mac.
In a one-handed version, there is exactly one button per finger. In a
two-handed version, you get four buttons per finger, and the thumbs
don't do anything. You can also get one-handed versions with three
thumb buttons -- compatible with the InfoGrip Bat. Basically, get it
any way you want.
They also have a software tutorial to help you learn the chording,
which can also be used as a one-handed chording system for most
DOS apps, using the standard keyboard.
Works on a PC under DOS, not Windows. Planning on Macintosh and
PC/Windows support. No work has been done on a Unix version, yet.
13) Octima
Phone: 972-4-5322844 (Israel)
Fax: 972-3-5322970
Ergoplic Keyboards Ltd.
P.O. Box 31
Kiryat Ono 55100, Israel
(info from Mandy Jaffe-Katz <RXHFUN@HAIFAUVM.BITNET>)
A one-handed keyboard.
14) Twiddler
Phone: 516-474-4405, or 800-638-2352
Handykey
141 Mt. Sinai Ave.
Mt. Sinai, NY 11766
Chris George (President)
Price: $199.
Shipping: now.
Supports: PC
The Twiddler is both a keyboard and a mouse, and it fits in one hand.
You type via finger chords. Shift, control, etc. are thumb buttons.
When in "mouse" mode, tilting the Twiddler moves the mouse, and mouse
buttons are on your fingers.
The cabling leaves your normal keyboard available, also.
Most applications work, and Windows works fine. DESQview has trouble.
GEOWorks also has trouble -- mouse works, keyboard doesn't. OS/2
compatibility coming soon.
60 day full refund, minus shipping fee.
15) Voice Navigator
Phone: 617-935-5656
Articulate Systems
A product based on DragonDictate, for the Macintosh.
Call for more info.
Thanks
------
Thanks go to Chris Bekins <AS.CCB@forsythe.stanford.edu> for providing
the basis for this information.
Thanks to the numerous contributors:
Doug Martin <martin@nosc.mil>
Carroll Morgan <Carroll.Morgan@prg.oxford.ac.uk>
Mandy Jaffe-Katz <RXHFUN@HAIFAUVM.BITNET>
Wes Hunter <Wesley.Hunter@AtlantaGA.NCR.com>
Paul Schwartz <pschwrtz@cs.washington.edu>
H.J. Woltring <WOLTRING@NICI.KUN.NL>
Dan Sorenson <viking@iastate.edu>
Chris VanHaren <vanharen@MIT.EDU>
Ravi Pandya <ravi@xanadu.com>
Leonard H. Tower Jr. <tower@ai.mit.edu>
Dan Jacobson <Dan_Jacobson@ATT.COM>
Jim Cheetham <jim@oasis.icl.co.uk>
Cliff Lasser <cal@THINK.COM>
Richard Donkin <richardd@hoskyns.co.uk>
Paul Rubin <phr@napa.Telebit.COM>
David Erb <erb@fullfeed.com>
Bob Scheifler <rws@x.org>
Chris Grant <Chris.Grant@um.cc.umich.edu>
Scott Mandell <sem1@postoffice.mail.cornell.edu>
John Darragh <darragh@cpsc.ucalgary.ca>
Russell Nelson <nelson@crynwr.com>
John Lamp <jw_lamp@postoffice.utas.edu.au>
Paul Roossin <roossin@watson.ibm.com>
Tom Knotts <knotts@hpl-opus.hpl.hp.com>
Donna Foley <dbeabak@cfrvm.cfr.usf.edu>
Bob Adams <rea@gacc.atl.ga.us>
Gary Karp <72212.3240@COMPUSERVE.COM>
Kelly Fairbanks <ADP2C@MSU.EDU>
Peter Bower <cyberdoc@CRL.COM>
Paul Benati <benatip@acadia.image.Kodak.COM>
Peter S. Cohen <70254.535@CompuServe.COM>
and everybody else who I've probably managed to forget.
The opinions in here are my own, unless otherwise mentioned, and do not
represent the opinions of any organization or vendor.
--
Dan Wallach "One of the most attractive features of a Connection
dwallach@cs.princeton.edu Machine is the array of blinking lights on the faces
Phone#: 609-452-8446 of its cabinet." -- CM Paris Ref. Manual, v6.0, p48.
(World-Wide-Web) http://www.cs.princeton.edu/grad/Dan_Wallach/top.html