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- From: Andy Kossowsky <AKOSSOWSKY@TURBO.kean.edu>
- Newsgroups: sci.virtual-worlds
- Subject: Re: APPS: VR word proccesing?
- Date: Tue, 22 Dec 1992 15:13:08 EST
- Organization: University of Washington
- Lines: 42
- Approved: cyberoid@milton.u.washington.edu
- Message-ID: <1hp3f5INNcd4@shelley.u.washington.edu>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: stein.u.washington.edu
- Originator: hlab@stein.u.washington.edu
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-
- From: thinman@netcom.com (Technically Sweet)
- Date: Mon, 21 Dec 1992 19:35:15 GMT
-
- >>AKOSSOWSKY@TURBO.kean.edu (Andy Kossowsky) writes:
- >>
- >>Has anyone heard of a VR app that creates a virtual keyboard,
- >>and lets you accuratly type?
- >
- >SUN's 3470 terminal emulator for NeWS included a full keyboard on the
- >screen; this was good because 3470 has lots of weird keys and
- >sometimes it's just a major pain to look up on a cheat sheet what key
- >combination on your terminal makes a "Send Page" or whatnot.
- >
- >How you do this in VR, I don't know. Here are two possibilities for
- >an encumbered-style keyboard:
- >
- > 1) Casio MIDI saxophone. These things were consumer
- > toys, little electronic saxes. I've got mine running
- > as a computer keyboard and plan to switch over in an
- > attempt to deal with tendonitis.
- >
- > 2) Strap a 5-key chord keyboard to your left thigh.
-
- --- Reply by Andy Kossowsky :
-
- Thanks for the info, but what I was really wondering about is a PURELY
- virtual keyboard, ie, to an observer, it just looks like you're typing
- in mid air! Those 5-key chord systems have been around for quite some
- time, I know, and if they had cought on back in the early '80's when I
- first saw them, perhaps keyboards in portables wouldn't be such a
- design problem today. BTW, my best guess is that the alphanumeric
- workstations on Star Trek-TNG are based and a chord system like that.
- The reason I bring this VR wordprocessing subject up at all, is a few
- weeks ago, an InfoWorld columnist wrote an article saying pocket
- computers would be useless because people can't type on them.
-
- Apparently, he hasn't heard that computers are occationally used for
- things other than word processing, but even so, I'm betting that soon
- even word processing won't be dependant on a full-size qwerty
- keyboard. What do y'all think? ApK
-