8pen Reinvents the Keyboard For Mobile Devices 214
An anonymous reader submitted linkage to a company called 8pen that has a new take on one-handed input. I've attached the video if you click the link below, but it's a strange idea using outward spreading swipes that somewhat mimics handwriting. It ships for Android tomorrow, but even if you don't want to try it out, it's an interesting idea for anyone who is tired of finger tapping on a tiny screen.
Learning curve? (Score:4, Insightful)
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I think when compared to the size of the keyboard when in vertical screen mode, it might be quick. May not be competitive with the horizontal layout for a while, but won't be hard to beat vertical.
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I agree, my baseball bat sized fingertips are unable to use the on-screen keyboard in vertical mode.
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How are they supposed to learn this?
When their interest level is high enough it'll come quick enough.
They did (Score:2)
That's why so many old phone numbers are of the form word-numbers, like PEnnsylvania-65000. It just made them easier to remember, a word and five digits as opposed to 7 digits. They were just names, backfit to match the digits, so PEnnsylvania and ODeriferous were the same exchange. They were called exchanges, but I don't know if the public used that word in the same way that telephone engineers used it.
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That's all true, but when they went to direct dialing, they could have changed the exchange letters to digits, but they didn't, which I attribute to words being easier to memorize than just more digits, besides not wanting to upset the old customers. But new exchanges continued the policy.
More keyboards (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:More keyboards (Score:5, Funny)
All these different types of keyboards for the android devices are making my head spin. Next it will be brain waves to text! I'll stick with SwipeIT, thank you very much....
I think that I hope my boss doesn't see me posting on slashdot brain waves wow that girl from HR walked by, look at her tits to text is the Jesus how much coffee did that moron bob put in this cup? way of the future What else should i write. Uhm ... I guess thats it
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Indeed. Its a lot easier to hire a dork for a crappy temporary "contract-for-hire" job when he gets the pitch while sitting in a starbucks across from a perky blonde in a miniskirt.
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while swype is nice, I think this (8pen) reflects on the fact that the original qwerty keyboard isn't necessarily the best layout in town or the worst, and that maybe it's time people start looking into full on alternatives.
I'm not saying Dvorak, but since we can rearrange keys by choice, maybe it's time people look for something that might work better.
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Future steps (Score:4, Insightful)
You know, you could add a pen to the device, so you don't have to deal with, say, something that makes it hard to swipe your finger across the screen and reduce the grease in the screen.
Then, after that, you could make the movements more like handwritting, since people are used to that.
Then, maybe, to help people write things faster, put split areas for letters and numbers.
You know, I think I saw that somewhere else before....
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I was going to post about how graffiti was the best ever and 8pen probably sucks, but after watching the video, i think i'm kind of intrigued by it.
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One handed? Try this, hold your phone with one hand, and try to make circular motions on the front surface using your thumb. I don't know about you, but pulling over toward my palm and then moving down (the noon-to-four motion) is pretty hard to do.
But that's ok, all I need is some exercise: Push! Harder! Go faster Max! Reach over the top. Master your ass!
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Graffiti would work for me. (Score:2)
I still have a Handspring Visor.
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What is this handwriting you speak of? Do you mean how you use your hands to interface with the keyboard?
It's when you use your mailing label printer to spray a note on your hand so you can remember your task list until your cellphone battery recharges.
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Graffiti is exactly what he's describing, in what I thought was a fairly obvious tongue-in-cheek manner.
Interesting (Score:5, Interesting)
Reminds me a bit of Swype [swypeinc.com] though watching the video, it seems like it would be slower than Swype.
I'll probably try it out though. My anticipation is that I would need to learn the positions of all the letters to know how many sectors to cover for each. Counting them on the fly would really slow it down. And then there would be those words I'd hate because they involved lots of swirls. Like how we hated people with 9s in their phone numbers during the days of rotary phones.
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Reminds me of Quikwriting (Score:3, Informative)
Reminds me more of Quikwriting, actually... ...yup, 11 years old. Ken Perlin dabbled with input methods for a while there...
http://slashdot.org/hardware/99/04/29/1734246.shtml [slashdot.org]
http://cs.nyu.edu/~perlin/ [nyu.edu]
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That's what I immediately thought of.
Personally, I thought Quickwriting could adapt very easily to a IBM trackpoint type device [wikipedia.org] (what one lesbian friend dubbed the "clit mouse") to allow text input via a device small enough to fit on the end of a device the size of a pen.
Ripoff/copy/enhancement of quikwriting (Score:2, Informative)
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Swype is awesome, I'm faster with one finger in portrait mode than I ever was with two in landscape mode.
All I gotta say.
Re:Interesting (Score:4, Insightful)
The issue with swype is that, no matter how good you get at it, you still have to pay attention to the screen.
With this, you could type without looking at the screen, finally allowing smartphone owners to text and drive as efficiently as the luddites with their old-school keypads. ;)
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Anybody know if Swype is only for Nokia phones?
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Try out the Epic 4g, I got one recently and the keyboard is great. Not perfect, some keys could be rearranged and god knows why they put a smiley key instead of a .com key, but it's good otherwise.
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I like my epic as well, the keyboard would have been a little better if the key tops were not perfectly flat and smooth. A little roundness and texture would make typing just a tad easier.
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Swype is crazy fast. I'll show it to friends and it really messes with their heads the amount I can type with what seems to be very little movement on my part. This is especially true with words that have multiple occurrences of repeated letter. They use Missippi in the demo video for good reason.
It's like moving from hunt-and-peck to touch typing. TFA says 8pen is like writing by hand, which is why I think it would be slower than something that is very much like typing.
Useless (Score:4, Informative)
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Those of us who have been on the Internet since puberty have already mastered the art of one-handed input with a standard keyboard and mouse. With the proper motivation we can easily adapt this skill to a regular on-screen keyboard.
Mobile devices by their very nature tend to be used in public areas. Your "motivation" is unlikely to be considered acceptable behavior.
Not a great implementation (Score:2)
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The process assumes that a keyboard is less handy than a touch-rotate-touch-release. In short, this is doomed to fail because I must memorize things. It's probably easier for us to all learn Morse, and just have a deet da dee deet festival.
Nah, I think its more along the lines of a Carlos Mencia "Deet de Dee"
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until you reach that point, you're down to hunting letters every time, with either system.
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We will go from qwerty to voice.
Hell if I'm going to be composing my text messages by voice in public; at that point, I would just.... you know... give the person a fucking call.
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Why would you have to memorize anything? In the video they have a very cool animation where the letters are magnified as the finger moves. Presumably the same kind of interface could be (or has been) developed to aid in memorizing the gestures. I absolutely cannot stand virtual touch keyboards on mobile devices--this on the other hand would actually make me consider a touch-screen device. (I currently have a e71x with a tiny little physical qwerty keyboard that I can almost tolerate.)
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t's probably easier for us to all learn Morse, and just have a deet da dee deet festival.
An L festival?
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I agree. It is common knowledge that we are all born with an innate understanding of the location of the keys on a QWERTY keyboard. If we had to memorize things it would have never taken off!
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It's probably easier for us to all learn Morse, and just have a deet da dee deet festival.
While quickly tapping with your thumb could lead to strained muscles, I think it would be the perfect solution for voice input!
No more complex voice recognition algorithms. Just ask the user to say "dee" and "daa" so that the phone knows what's a dot and what's a line and off you go. You'd sound like a total nerd, but I'm sure it would have better accuracy than current voice recognition :P
Wrong adjective. (Score:2, Interesting)
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Yea, it reminds me The Onion's Apple Wheel parody [theonion.com]. Funny that it was not Apple that actually implemented it!
Red, Yellow, Green, Blue? What? (Score:2)
Is it a big coincidence, or is there someone at 8pen who's a Neo-Geo [gstatic.com] fan?
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Take a look at the Android logo. Look at the Chrome logo. Look at the Simon Says logo.
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The Android logo is a green robot...
The Chrome logo looks like Samus in morph ball mode.
Simon says blue-blue-red-green-yellow-green-yellow-blue-red.
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Simon games are red, blue, yellow, green. Not the same order.
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Perhaps you should try it first - you know, so you don't look like an idiot so much.
Bah. (Score:2)
One-handed input without an appropriate name? I'm sticking with my Twiddler [handykey.com].
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WARNING: $200
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A bluetooth version would have been nice.
Did they just repackage Palm? (Score:2)
Palm recognition (Score:4, Insightful)
This seems like a bit of an awkward kludge - capacitive touchscreens are evidently not terribly well suited to such precise inputs.
It's been about 10 years since I've regularly used a Palm Pilot. Handwriting recognition on those devices Worked. I could get quite consistent input, at roughly the same speed as I could writing by hand.
To this day, my written "T" still looks like a "7" on occasion. It felt quite natural and, as far as I know, no handwriting mechanism has come close to rivaling it for effectiveness/consistency.
Do the WebOS devices still have this capability?
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But you still need to memorize _some_ of the qwerty layout, from a visual perspective. (my hands have it memorized on a normal keyboard). When Swyping, my finger or thumb blocks letters near it. I do agree that you don't have to memorize any gestures.
Advantage over drawing letters? (Score:2)
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I suspect one benefit of this is the ability to input text using only a thumb, much like one can on a numpad.
Overly Complicated (Score:2)
faster? that seems questionable at best (Score:2)
just watched the video. even if i memorized every gesture (quite a feat mind you) how could making a gesture be faster than one single press, which is what i have today?
the only possibly advantage is success rate. for an on screen keyboard my success rate varies between 80-60%. depending on how tired i am and how much attention i'm paying. could this do better? it seems possible since you only need to move your finger from the center to 2 of the four large sections ... that are much larger than a key on an
This won't catch on. (Score:2, Flamebait)
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There's too much hassle in learning the system and becoming proficient in it. I use Swype [youtube.com] which is phenomenal - it's fast and hardly requires any learning if you know the qwerty keyboard.
The trade off is a steeper learning curve for a system that doesn't require direct attention to use. With swipe you must look at the keyboard. The theory with 8pen is that once you are proficient you can do it without looking at the screen (much like touch typing).
Imagine this scenario: you are chatting with someone and also typing on your phone at the same time. Contrived but I do that on my computer when someone comes into my office (finish what I was typing while talking to them). With 8pen you should
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Finally, I can text while driving! /sigh
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Yeah, I agree it most likely won't catch on.
speech recognition (Score:2)
Quite similar to Quikwriting in 1998 (Score:2, Informative)
It uses the same kind of gestures but with a different layout.
http://www.google.nl/search?hl=&q=quikwriting
Graffiti (Score:2)
This reminds me of the input method used on the Palm: Graffiti. With Graffiti, you had to learn how the Palm expected you to write the letters. Most was just uppercase versions of the letters, but some were quite different. It took a while to learn.
It's easy enough to learn, but there was a case reported of someone saying that handwriting of those people using Graffiti was suffering. Sometimes they'd write a Graffiti version of the letter they were writing, or somewhere between the letter and the graffiti v
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there have always been needs for fast input. Consider shorthand:
https://secure.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/wiki/Shorthand [wikimedia.org]
Good!Now, put it at the back of my device, please. (Score:2, Interesting)
If someone comes up with a device that uses something like this - but with the input at the back of the device - I'm sold. Just make some dints and bumps so that my finger knows where it is.
This is great! (Score:2)
Absolutely... an efficient one-handed input system. That'll be absolutely perfect for surfing porn^H^H^H^H^H^H reading Wikipedia articles...
Why not just use Graffiti - available for Android (Score:3, Informative)
Why not just use Graffiti. I think it would be much easier to learn and provides visual feedback. It's also now available for Android platforms [access-company.com].
Although very cool at the time, the original Apple Newton handwriting recognition recognition was somewhat weak and suffered from too much emphasis on predictive dictionary lookup. So much so that even a perfectly formed "falafel" always resulted in "father" until falafel was added to the dictionary. The solution was Graffiti. Later Newtons had much better handwriting recognition and Graffiti was no longer needed, but the Palm Pilot, a Newton competitor, adopted Graffiti and was, thus able to run on much cheaper hardware and take over the PDA market. After many years, legal wrangling [engadget.com] put the ownership of Graffiti in the hands of Access, which has made it available for Android.
Like a Rotary Telephone (Score:2)
The worst of Swype and chorded keyboards (Score:2)
Hell, I'm not even programming for Android and I think I could reimplement Graffiti faster than I could get comfortable
Not liking it (Score:2)
While keyboard has its problems, this thing is so foreign that it makes the learning curve too steep to even consider by a busy person.
On the other hand, Palm's Graffiti system is simple and effective. Back in the day, I was using graffiti quickly and easily. It should be used here as well.
Further, what about foreign entry? Not so sure their "commonly used characters" notion works as well when used in a non-English scenario. So while keyboard style entry is not the most appropriate method for mobile dev
Looks very slow (Score:2)
If it gets close or even hits the speed of handwriting, that's nice. But we type, in part, because typing is faster than hand-writing.
This is not going to be as fast as a keyboard.
funny... (Score:2)
i thought that keyboards where around long before the age of computers...
no improvements in 10 years (Score:2)
First off, this looks like a nightmare to learn... Why do" hunt and peck" typists type so slow? It's not the "peck" part... Completely rearranging a keyboard is a sure way to give yourself a 100 meter sheer cliff of a learning curve... If you've used a keyboard frequently for a couple years, qwerty is so hard coded in your muscle memory that switching to a simple alphabetical layout is painful. I say this as a dual dvorak/qwerty typist, who has extensively used (not just toyed with) a great many small-
Re:Video? (Score:4, Informative)
Safari doesn't display anything. I see the problem. Same problem as their website.
Note: The tag is deprecated. [w3schools.com] There's articles as far back as 2006 [alistapart.com] saying to stop using the embed tag.
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I completely agree here. I look at all of these "new methods", and yet we are stuck with the QWERTY. A typing arrangement that was meant to be slow. I think the core part of this problem is that we are used to this keyboard. And no matter how hard this keyboard is I am guessing it is completely hard wired into our brain to the point where we are pretty good at it. Not like that is a first oops moment in the evolution sequence.
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QWERTY. A typing arrangement that was meant to be slow.
That is a common misconception. The QWERTY arrangement was designed to put common "chords" at opposite sides of the keyboard, so that the hammers on a typewriter wouldn't catch on each other and jam. So while, theoretically, QWERTY is _slightly_ slower than other layouts, the reality is that the speed difference is never more than a couple wpm. The layout was designed because people were too fast for the hardware of the time, but it did not solve the problem by slowing typists down; rather it accommodated
Not mutually exclusive or a misconception (Score:2)
It is not a common misconception. In fact you just made the GPs point. The keys would jam because the hammers were being actuated in such a way that one would still be in its swiping range while the other started its own action. This resulted in hammers jamming. By rearranging the keys so that typing was s
qwerty is still stuck in the past (Score:2)
That may be true, but QWERTY was created before the understanding of typing mechanics and ergonomics, and thus missed out on a lot of easy optimizations. For example, when you drum your fingers on the desk, it's much easier to drum pinky->index then index-> pinky. Dvorak layout takes advantage of this.
I can type 100+ words per minute in either layout after a little warm-up. I *much* prefer to type at that speed in Dvorak than in qwerty. It feels a lot more comfortable.
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Palm OS Graffiti input. Enjoyed it for many years.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graffiti_(Palm_OS) [wikipedia.org]
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Actually, I used T9 almost exclusively until I got a smartphone. Once you get a hang of which common words show up in which order when you click "next word" you can pretty much touch type except for unique words.
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I use T9, it's not perfect, but beats the hell out of the other option (whatever it's called). But then again, I only write short SMS messages (yes, SMS = Short Message Service, so kill me) if you are writing a book or letters, use something better then your damn phone.
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Have you ever used Swype? I absolutely loved it from the first moment I tried it. It was instantly faster than two-thumb typing, and the more I use it the faster I get with it.
Ditto for T9 on a clamshell phone vs multi-button mashing (222-55-6-333-etc).
I've never used Gestures or Dasher, so I can't say for them.
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I guess there needs to be a new Slashdot abbreviation. WTEFV.
2:24 shows the actual layout.
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C'mon gman003. You can watch the whole video, surely, before posting?
Re:An Anonymous Reader Submitted This?? (Score:4, Insightful)
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Nor can you resign from the Can't Understand Sarcasm department.
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Are those letter positions optimal? The scheme feels nice, but I'm not sure if the letter positions are as good as they could be.
as the video says, they're optimised for their frequency in the english language and so that common words, like 'you', can be done with a figure of eight, or some easily memorised swirl...
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While neat in concept... you'd have to train it and you'd likely be turned off at first because your phone was trying to learn what you want.
It would be like having a baby without the fun stuff.
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