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- 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
- Sender: news@Princeton.EDU (USENET News System)
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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
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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
-