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Technology Stocks : PALM - The rebirth of Palm Inc. -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: David E. Taylor who wrote (4107)3/8/2001 7:06:34 PM
From: Mang Cheng  Respond to of 6784
 
David, here is another article from the same CNN site that you most likely havn't seen:

"Is your PDA a pian to typ on?"

March 7, 2001
Web posted at: 6:05 p.m. EST (2305
GMT)

With Ed Curran, Technogadgets

(CNN) -- I'm writing this article on my
Palm VII, using my stylus and the
Palm's outstanding handwriting recognition software called Graffiti.

Today's column is about a fool you can ruse with your handhelp for a great
dime!

Let me try that again.

"Graffiti is great, but you have to do it all the time, you have
to get used to not waiting for every letter to appear as text
before you write the next one, and you have to get used to
types that tike tome to correct. I mean, typos that take time to
correct."

Today's column is about a tool you can use with your handheld for a great time.

I'll get the hang of this Graffiti sooner or later. I've only been using the Palm
since its debut in 1996 and I'm still learning. I'm, of course, kidding.

Ever since I got my first Palm Pilot I've loved the operating system and I think
its handwriting recognition is great. Palm did a smart thing. Realizing that it's
really hard for a computer to recognize your handwriting and convert it into text,
Palm decided to teach everybody exactly how to draw their letters so the
computer would recognize them.

This way, my Palm knows what letters I've written, your Palm knows your
letters and my doctor's Palm ... well, looking at his handwriting on a recent
prescription, I'm not sure if his Palm gets it or not.

Graffiti is great, but you have to do it all
the time, you have to get used to not
waiting for every letter to appear as text
before you write the next one, and you
have to get used to types that tike tome to
correct. I mean, typos that take time to
correct.

Some people hate Graffiti and prefer to
type out text using a stylus and the soft
keyboard that pops up on the screen of
the Palm. The keyboard is a
QWERTY-style board, just like the one
you use with your computer. The letters
across the first row of keys are
Q-W-E-R-T-Y and that's how it got its
name.

This style of keyboard was designed for 10 fingers, although many of us who
only took one semester of typing in high school use far fewer fingers on our
keyboards. This makes QWERTY an inefficient method to use when typing with
one finger or, on the Palm, one stylus.

There's another kind of keyboard that works perfectly with pen computing. It's
called the FITALY keyboard and one look at the arrangement of the keys shows
you how it got its name. It can replace the soft keyboard in your handheld.

The layout was invented way back when your Palm Pilot was only a dream. This
little keyboard layout keeps letters together that normally follow each other in our
language. The FITALY key arrangement minimizes pen travel: 84 percent of the
text entry keystrokes are placed in a very tight pattern, with the remaining
keystrokes never more than two keys away.

"Using the FITALY system sure seems to make sense for
stylus typing. Until I get mind, ill keep flugging away with my
stylus and Graffiti and living every minute if it."

The arrangement allows you to use your stylus point and fly, up to about 50
words per minute. If I hit 50 WPM doing Graffiti, I think my Palm would catch
fire (not the machine ... the palm of my right hand).

The latest from the Textware Solutions company, the FITALY people, is the
FitalyStamp. This is a paper-thin FITALY keyboard that affixes to the Graffiti
section of your handheld, along with special software. Tap on the keyboard to
write on your Palm, or your Handspring, or your Pocket PC. It'll cost you $35.

Using the FITALY system sure seems to make sense for stylus typing.

Until I get mind, ill keep flugging away with my stylus and Graffiti and living
every minute if it.

cnn.com

Mang