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- Newsgroups: comp.sys.palmtops
- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!cis.ohio-state.edu!dendrite.cis.ohio-state.edu!pollack
- From: pollack@dendrite.cis.ohio-state.edu (Jordan B Pollack)
- Subject: Alternative to the Microwriter
- Message-ID: <POLLACK.92Jul21181126@dendrite.cis.ohio-state.edu>
- Originator: pollack@dendrite.cis.ohio-state.edu
- Sender: news@cis.ohio-state.edu (NETnews )
- Reply-To: pollack@cis.ohio-state.edu
- Organization: Ohio State Computer Science
- Distribution: comp
- Date: Tue, 21 Jul 1992 23:11:26 GMT
- Lines: 70
-
- Since Jonathan is now SHAMELESSLY representing Microwriter in half a
- dozen messages battling with this group to accept the "Microwriter
- Monopoly" in the chord keyboard market, I should point out that
- there is (almost) another alternative. (DISCLAIMER: if it ever sells,
- I will get royalties.)
-
- Maybe because my keyboard was invented here in America, it won't face
- such a hostile reaction. I don't know, since I got so busy getting
- my Phd that I never tried very hard to market it. It is very different
- from a Microwriter keyboard, and in fact, easier to learn and remember,
- and faster to operate. (DISCLAIMER: unsubstantiated claims.)
-
- It has a 6-way switch for each of 4 fingers, and each switch tilts
- forward and back and can be pressed down (and tilted). By
- distinguishing the paths to the lower corners (tilt-then-press, or
- press-then-tilt), each finger can send 7 different characters, for a
- total of 28. The thumb controls a space bar/joystick which can shift
- the character set, or act as a cursor control.
-
- It competes with the Microwriter in terms of compactness, component
- cost, and in not requiring visual feedback, but is quite different:
-
- a) the fingers' actions are independent and can overlap in time (which
- is in fact the secret to speed in a QWERTY keyboard)
-
- b) the arrangement of letters is very easy to learn, you can start to
- type as soon as you can memorize a sequence of seven words, which are
- associated with the 7 directions for the 4 fingers:
-
- Back: THY (pinky is BS)
- B&D : QWZ ("quiz" index is CR)
- D&B : FLIP
- Down: SERV
- D&F : MUCK
- F&D : OBJX (objects?)
- Forw: DANG
-
- For example to type a "T," tilt back the index finger, to type a "E",
- press down the middle finger, and to type an "M" press down
- then tilt forward the index finger.
-
- c) the overlap and rollover arrangement allows a surprising "speedup"
- through bigrams and trigrams of characters in which fingers move in
- lock-step fashion (like TH, ER, NG, and AND).
-
- Also, unlike a chord keyboard which you can build with $10 in
- pushbuttons and pullup resistors from Radio Shack (and a couple of
- hours of software development!), my keyboard cannot be built with off
- the shelf parts. Robicon, a little company in New Jersey has 10 custom
- machined prototypes (for PC serial port) available for review and
- development purposes. And they also have built one prototype of the
- ultra-cool WORDMAN: not a palmtop, but a belt-sized PC with a Private
- Eye heads-up display and the keyboard. They seem to be more interested
- in getting other industries to adopt the keyboard wholesale as a
- component than in building the wordman for direct sales.
-
- If there are any high-profile technology journalists reading this
- thread (since my brother won't touch it), or developers for big
- companies who need a small keyboard but can't deal with snobby british
- businessmen (Just Kidding, Jonathan!!) or if there is any palmtop user
- from around Princeton who wants to play with it and give this group a
- more objective review, let me know and I can put you in touch with
- Robicon, or you can contact Steve Lane yourself at:
- (lane@phoenix.princeton.edu)
-
- --
- Jordan Pollack Assistant Professor
- CIS Dept/OSU Laboratory for AI Research
- 2036 Neil Ave Email: pollack@cis.ohio-state.edu
- Columbus, OH 43210 Phone: (614)292-4890 (then * to fax)
-