Chorded Keyboard

From Openmoko

(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
(New page: '''Project Title''' Chorded Keyboards for Smart Phones '''Project Team Members''' Tom Sharp (supervised by Steve Furber) '''Contact Email''' sharpt@cs.man.ac.uk '''University''' School...)
 
Line 1: Line 1:
 
'''Project Title'''
 
'''Project Title'''
 
Chorded Keyboards for Smart Phones
 
Chorded Keyboards for Smart Phones
 +
  
 
'''Project Team Members'''  
 
'''Project Team Members'''  
 
Tom Sharp (supervised by Steve Furber)
 
Tom Sharp (supervised by Steve Furber)
 +
  
 
'''Contact Email'''
 
'''Contact Email'''
 
sharpt@cs.man.ac.uk
 
sharpt@cs.man.ac.uk
 +
  
 
'''University'''
 
'''University'''
 
School of Computer Science, The University of Manchester
 
School of Computer Science, The University of Manchester
 +
  
 
'''Short Description'''
 
'''Short Description'''
 +
 
Chorded keyboards use concurrent key presses to type characters from a large alphabet with only a few keys. In court room reporting, chorded keyboards are frequently used to obtain typing speeds upwards of 300 words per minute and this project will investigate the use of such keyboards in smart phones such as the Neo Freerunner.
 
Chorded keyboards use concurrent key presses to type characters from a large alphabet with only a few keys. In court room reporting, chorded keyboards are frequently used to obtain typing speeds upwards of 300 words per minute and this project will investigate the use of such keyboards in smart phones such as the Neo Freerunner.
  
 
A 5-key chorded keyboard will be built into the case of a Neo Freerunner, drivers will be written, and tests will be conducted to examine the performance (in terms of speed and accuracy) of the keyboard. It is hoped that the project will provide an antidote to the awkward typing methods currently prevalent amongst mobile devices.
 
A 5-key chorded keyboard will be built into the case of a Neo Freerunner, drivers will be written, and tests will be conducted to examine the performance (in terms of speed and accuracy) of the keyboard. It is hoped that the project will provide an antidote to the awkward typing methods currently prevalent amongst mobile devices.

Revision as of 22:26, 2 February 2009

Project Title Chorded Keyboards for Smart Phones


Project Team Members Tom Sharp (supervised by Steve Furber)


Contact Email sharpt@cs.man.ac.uk


University School of Computer Science, The University of Manchester


Short Description

Chorded keyboards use concurrent key presses to type characters from a large alphabet with only a few keys. In court room reporting, chorded keyboards are frequently used to obtain typing speeds upwards of 300 words per minute and this project will investigate the use of such keyboards in smart phones such as the Neo Freerunner.

A 5-key chorded keyboard will be built into the case of a Neo Freerunner, drivers will be written, and tests will be conducted to examine the performance (in terms of speed and accuracy) of the keyboard. It is hoped that the project will provide an antidote to the awkward typing methods currently prevalent amongst mobile devices.

Personal tools

Project Title Chorded Keyboards for Smart Phones


Project Team Members Tom Sharp (supervised by Steve Furber)


Contact Email sharpt@cs.man.ac.uk


University School of Computer Science, The University of Manchester


Short Description

Chorded keyboards use concurrent key presses to type characters from a large alphabet with only a few keys. In court room reporting, chorded keyboards are frequently used to obtain typing speeds upwards of 300 words per minute and this project will investigate the use of such keyboards in smart phones such as the Neo Freerunner.

A 5-key chorded keyboard will be built into the case of a Neo Freerunner, drivers will be written, and tests will be conducted to examine the performance (in terms of speed and accuracy) of the keyboard. It is hoped that the project will provide an antidote to the awkward typing methods currently prevalent amongst mobile devices.