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Karel Jansens's Avatar
Posts: 3,220 | Thanked: 326 times | Joined on Oct 2005 @ "Almost there!" (Monte Christo, Count of)
#11
Originally Posted by Benson View Post
Here you go
To my knowledge, nothing has been done with that "release", most likely because the "Hildon Input Method Framework" sux big donkey balls.

As a concept, Nokia's handwriting input method is fifteen to twenty years old, relying on the stupidest of all thinkable modularity models (with the possible exception of the Zaurus HWR, which actually requires the user to open the input box by hand!) and provided with an AI that is reminiscent of Red Dwarf's Holly in its lousier days.

In short, HWR on the Itablets sucks, and open sourcing it doesn't make it suddenly less suckier.

But don't mind me, I'm just a grumpy old fart who refuses to go "Woohoo!" every time some PHB at Nokia takes a dump.

(... which is kinda ironic, given that farts usually precede the faeces)
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JELaVallee's Avatar
Posts: 8 | Thanked: 0 times | Joined on Mar 2008 @ Richmond, VA, USA
#12
It's worth keeping in mind that the handwriting recognition system in Palm (Graffiti) was designed not as a continuous-handwriting recognition system but as a "block entry" system (a human computer interface input term). Hence the simplification of input strokes and the idea of character modifiers like the "shift/cap stroke" (stroke-up) or the "character stroke" (tap) on the writing area.

So, in an ideal world we could just install a Graffiti input control into the N8x0 system and be done with it, but no such beast exists.

Back when had a Treo 180 with the graffiti pad, I used this and really liked the input pattern:
http://mrl.nyu.edu/~perlin/demos/Quikwrite2.html

It would be cool to port that input method to Maemo/Hildon UI... hrm...

cheers,
Etienne
 
Benson's Avatar
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#13
Originally Posted by Karel Jansens View Post
To my knowledge, nothing has been done with that "release", most likely because the "Hildon Input Method Framework" sux big donkey balls.

As a concept, Nokia's handwriting input method is fifteen to twenty years old, relying on the stupidest of all thinkable modularity models (with the possible exception of the Zaurus HWR, which actually requires the user to open the input box by hand!) and provided with an AI that is reminiscent of Red Dwarf's Holly in its lousier days.

In short, HWR on the Itablets sucks, and open sourcing it doesn't make it suddenly less suckier.
No, but it opens the door for putting something somewhat less sucky in its place. I think a graffiti-like system should work flawlessly*, if some open-source implementation and some sharp maemo developer collide properly.

* Flawlessly here denotes that it works like on a Palm, with no glitches caused by the collision of two stupidly thinkable modularity models , rather than that it constitutes a real HWR system, let alone a good one.)
 
Karel Jansens's Avatar
Posts: 3,220 | Thanked: 326 times | Joined on Oct 2005 @ "Almost there!" (Monte Christo, Count of)
#14
Originally Posted by Benson View Post
No, but it opens the door for putting something somewhat less sucky in its place. I think a graffiti-like system should work flawlessly*, if some open-source implementation and some sharp maemo developer collide properly.

* Flawlessly here denotes that it works like on a Palm, with no glitches caused by the collision of two stupidly thinkable modularity models , rather than that it constitutes a real HWR system, let alone a good one.)
I consider Palm's Graffiti only marginally better than the Itablet's mess, and Jot (also known as Graffiti2) as the better of both, mainly because it allows for full-screen text entry. The only reason Graffiti seems fast, is because it forces the user to train and adapt to the computer, which is frankly ridiculous if you think about it.

And am I really the only one who thinks a dedicated text input area is soooo nineteen nineties?
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Benson's Avatar
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#15
Originally Posted by Karel Jansens View Post
I consider Palm's Graffiti only marginally better than the Itablet's mess, and Jot (also known as Graffiti2) as the better of both, mainly because it allows for full-screen text entry. The only reason Graffiti seems fast, is because it forces the user to train and adapt to the computer, which is frankly ridiculous if you think about it.

And am I really the only one who thinks a dedicated text input area is soooo nineteen nineties?
Ridiculous, perhaps, but it's been that way for ever. Keyboards are not well adapted to human input; humans adapt to keyboards. Automotive controls and even writing systems themselves are shaped largely by implementation cost. Adapting a human is much cheaper than adapting a machine.

Of course, technology has advanced since the first Palms a long way, and it's to be expected we can come up with something with less adaptation on the user's part. But to me Graffiti seems much better than the HWR on the tablet, because it does one thing well. It uses one simplified (for greater recognizability) alphabet. And yes, you do have to learn that, just like learning touch-typing.

But the NITs' HWR tries to match many slightly different alphabets, each with less differentiation of characters, and fails. So you wind up with the need to re-train yourself anyway, if only for the worst few letters. If you can't get genuine adaptive HWR right, you shouldn't do it.

I'm not persuaded that the Newton's way of letting you write anywhere is such a great one; I'm not persuaded against it either, never having had a Newton. (I do know it, even confined to the dedicated area of a hildon-input-method, would spank the Nokia's HWR.) But one thing I can say against it: It inhibits porting of programs from "normal" OSes. When programs expect mouse and keyboard input, stylus and some dedicated text input method is one of the easiest ways to make that work. Maybe it should only be a fallback system, but for a device I use the way I use my N800, it must be there, and it must work right; hence my use of the finger keyboard at present. If graffiti or similar was available, I'd almost certainly switch.
 
terrencegf's Avatar
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#16
I would certainly switch to using a Graffiti 1 style input if one became available. Even with my Palm TX, I hacked it to use Graffiti 1 because I thought Graffiti 2 was a step backwards. (I never could get used to using two strokes for 'i' and 't'.) However, I think that Palms were designed primarily for English speakers. The NIT's Unix-based design easily allows for other languages. (Well, maybe not 'easily' for Asian languages.) I think it may be difficult to create a Graffiti type input that works for multiple languages (if one is ever created at all).
 
Karel Jansens's Avatar
Posts: 3,220 | Thanked: 326 times | Joined on Oct 2005 @ "Almost there!" (Monte Christo, Count of)
#17
Originally Posted by Benson View Post
I'm not persuaded that the Newton's way of letting you write anywhere is such a great one; I'm not persuaded against it either, never having had a Newton. (I do know it, even confined to the dedicated area of a hildon-input-method, would spank the Nokia's HWR.) But one thing I can say against it: It inhibits porting of programs from "normal" OSes. When programs expect mouse and keyboard input, stylus and some dedicated text input method is one of the easiest ways to make that work. Maybe it should only be a fallback system, but for a device I use the way I use my N800, it must be there, and it must work right; hence my use of the finger keyboard at present. If graffiti or similar was available, I'd almost certainly switch.
PenOffice uses the same HWR engine as the Newton (well, not exactly. Newtons had two HWR engines: Rosetta, developed by Apple, and ParaGraph, which is used by PenOffice. But I digress); it runs on Windows and basically sends keyboard calls to the operating system.

PenOffice works with every Windows program I've thrown at it. It's not as smooth as a Newton, but the modality is very well hidden and rather intuitive (you need to hold the stylus still for just a tad longer to switch from ink drawing to pointing) and it works with active and passive digitizers.

So it's not that it can't be done -- it has been done! -- but rather that it needs a developer with some cognitive ability.
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Watch out Nokia, Pandora's box has opened (sorta)...
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Benson's Avatar
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#18
Had heard of PenOffice, but didn't realize it was... that nice. I almost want to buy it just to install it on my desktop and use it via rdp. The wierd thing is, it seems as though it would actually work that way (i.e. plain mouse events are enough for it).

EDIT: Just remembered I saw a download link; went back, and whaddaya know? Free 30-day trial. So at some point, I will try it on Windows via RDP. It'd be a shame if the N800 turned out to be more useful for note-taking that way. But I guess we already know it's a shame...

Last edited by Benson; 2008-03-13 at 12:49.
 
Karel Jansens's Avatar
Posts: 3,220 | Thanked: 326 times | Joined on Oct 2005 @ "Almost there!" (Monte Christo, Count of)
#19
Originally Posted by Benson View Post
Had heard of PenOffice, but didn't realize it was... that nice. I almost want to buy it just to install it on my desktop and use it via rdp. The wierd thing is, it seems as though it would actually work that way (i.e. plain mouse events are enough for it).

EDIT: Just remembered I saw a download link; went back, and whaddaya know? Free 30-day trial. So at some point, I will try it on Windows via RDP. It'd be a shame if the N800 turned out to be more useful for note-taking that way. But I guess we already know it's a shame...
I've been using it on my tablet pcs for two years and I love it. It's not as good as my old Newtons because -- well, because it's Windows, frankly. But it'll do.


Edit: Benson, don't forget to try out PenCommander. It's one of the most amazing visual macro systems I've ever come across.

Yes, I know: I can type much faster than I can write (I'm a ten-finger typist), but I can write where I cannot type and I repeat the major advantage HWR has over any keyboard: You're not writing blind! HWR is (aside from speech recognition) the only input method where you can keep your eyes on the screen and still see what your hand is doing.

(Now eagerly awaiting seedy remarks about seeing what's going on on the screen and what your hand is doing and -- Oh, soddit! get on with the pr0n jokes already)
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Watch out Nokia, Pandora's box has opened (sorta)...
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Last edited by Karel Jansens; 2008-03-13 at 14:52. Reason: My finger slipped
 
Benson's Avatar
Posts: 4,930 | Thanked: 2,272 times | Joined on Oct 2007
#20
Originally Posted by Karel Jansens View Post
Edit: Benson, don't forget to try out PenCommander. It's one of the most amazing visual macro systems I've ever come across.

Yes, I know: I can type much faster than I can write (I'm a ten-finger typist), but I can write where I cannot type and I repeat the major advantage HWR has over any keyboard: You're not writing blind! HWR is (aside from speech recognition) the only input method where you can keep your eyes on the screen and still see what your hand is doing.
Thanks!

Not sure how you mean that; as opposed to big-fat-finger effect, or opposed to looking back and forth between input widget and destination widget?

The former is of course answered by the stylus-board, or even use of stylus on finger-board. (I find myself doing this when I wish to type a lot without getting my BT keyboard; like right now.)

The latter is answered by the old flying-keyboard xterm; a limited use to be sure, but I can't imagine liking any HWR better for running a terminal. Some things are really made for keyboarding.
And writing on paper, I'm hardly ever looking at my hand; yes, my writing's sloppy, but humans can read it anyway, even with the clumsy printed alphabet. (I don't do cursive; I can't even read that.) With an optimized (single-stroke) alphabet, you shouldn't have to look at the writing area.
 
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