ie8 fix

The keyboard ain't bad: An iPad retraction?

By | April 5, 2010, 5:30am PDT

Summary: With the iPad’s arrival, many have tried the kicker feature - the on-screen keyboard - and with 50% capacity of a normal typing keyboard, some say it’s not that bad.

My colleague Joel Evans who writes for the ZDNet Mobile Gadgeteer blog tried and tested the iPad keyboard. Equally to my surprise yet dismay, he managed 47 words a minute through an iTextSpeed testing application. He managed to get 23 words correct yet only 7 words incorrect during his test.

I am a competent typist and when I get going on an average day, I write around 80-85 words a minute. Strangely enough, when I get a headache I write more averaging 90-95 a minute. Granted, most of those are spelling mistakes of sorts, but then again I am mildly dyslexic. Journalist and made it to university? Thank God I wasn’t brought up in the 1970’s some might say.

One of my biggest gripes with tablet, slate - whatever you want to call them - computers, the devices with no physical keyboard, is exactly that; the lack of the physical keyboard. There is a reason why laptops and netbooks, albeit not as much, are as popular as they are with students and that’s because they can type to their heart’s content without the need to necessarily think about the act of typing.

When I got my new laptop, the first touch-screen laptop I had ever used, actually, the on-screen keyboard wasn’t that bad as I thought it would be but still took some getting used to. The thought of using it to write an entire essay would be preposterous.

Side note
This doesn’t represent fully the on-screen keyboard utility in Windows 7, nor is it really a fair comparison to that of the iPad. The iPad on-screen keyboard seems “friendlier” and easier not to make mistakes with, frankly.

Though, with hindsight, I don’t think iPad’s or tablet PC’s are designed for students to write entire essays on. There are just no clear guidelines or even considerations from the hardware or software manufacturers to say so.

Some users can write entire articles with the iPad with some asking whether it could replace the laptop entirely. I don’t think it will, though Apple products to sport a popular trend - they haven’t taken over the world before now; I doubt the iPad single-handedly will storm the planet with mystical like power. The one thing it has done is blown the tablet market way out of its own league, offering more devices at a potentially cheaper cost.

So this isn’t a retraction of previous comments, as sorts. It’s an acknowledgement that the one kicker feature for me - the on-screen keyboard - may not be as bad as I thought it was. We shall see; I have yet to endure the local Apple store and thronging towards and against the shop window in a mass-panic geek lynch mob.

But we shall see.

Got an iPad yet? What’s the keyboard like? Good? Bad? Want to throw it against the wall already? Worth the price of $500 along with the unwritten right to your first born child? Have your say.

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Topics

Zack Whittaker, a criminologist who studied at the University of Kent, Canterbury, is a journalist, writer and broadcaster.

Disclosure

Zack Whittaker

I worked briefly with Microsoft UK in 2006 but no longer have any connection with the company. Regardless, I remain impartial and unbiased in my views.

I don't hold any stock or shares, investments or industrial secrets in any company, but have signed confidentiality agreements with a number of UK and U.S. organisations, whose names I am not at liberty to disclose.

I was involved with Kent Union, the University of Kent's student union, undertaking voluntary, non-salaried, elected positions between early 2009 and mid-2010.

No other company, body, government department, non-governmental organisation or third sector organisation employs me or pays me a salary in any capacity whatsoever.

As a freelance journalist, whenever expenses are given and taken by a company that is not CBS Interactive, these will be disclosed in each relevant post to ensure transparency.

I currently work with a UK law enforcement unit, but this is an entirely separate position which bears no connection to other work.

(Updated: 23rd October 2011)

Biography

Zack Whittaker

Zack Whittaker, criminologist who studied at the University of Kent, UK, is a journalist, writer and broadcaster.

After studying criminology at university, though still in his early-20's, he has already had a series unconventional work and voluntary positions. He has worked with researchers studying neurological illnesses like Tourette's syndrome (which he suffers from), has given lectures on the nature of disabilities in the public community, and occasionally ends up speaking on television and radio discussing the events of the day.

He first had academic work published at the age of 22, then still an undergraduate, and has been cited by a wide range of publications: from the Huffington Post, Business Insider, AllThingsDigital, The Atlantic Wire and CBS News.

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I have a similar conclusion
Glen Burchers 9th Apr 2010
I've used my ipad everyday since Saturday. I like the soft keyboard more than I thought I would. http://smartmobiledevices.wordpress.com/2010/04/09/i-may-stop-worrying-about-keyboard/
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of course, not
bannedfromzdnetagain 5th Apr 2010
"So this isn?t a retraction of previous comments, as sorts."

of course not.

you should rather stay rather with your bias and preconceptions.
remember: it is not a good e-reader, because it is not black & white e-
ink!
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he isn't biased
nothingness 5th Apr 2010
The iPad isn't a good e-reader because it is next to impossible to read in direct sunlight... it also isn't good for typing papers because touch screen typing isn't very comfortable...just facts
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AAAAHHHHH!! How dare these
John Zern 5th Apr 2010
people post honest, non-glaring reviews of a product?

This is Apple we're talking about: any negativity towards any of their their products is pure BS!!
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Only in some cases...
SkateNY 5th Apr 2010
In which the hidden agenda is so transparent as
to be embarrassing...such as knee-jerk
reactions from those who have little else to do
than bash Apple and those who use their
products.
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if you have any dedicated typing to do you can use either one of these two options...
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Defeats the purpose?
John Zern 5th Apr 2010
if you have to start lugging them around, wouldn't a netbook be a better choice then?
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...to type long, War & Peace length writings
right?

if you're writing War & Peace length writings
where are you going to be doing that sort of
thing? at a desk or table right?

you don't need a physical keyboard to write a
short email or update a document on the go..
the REAL WORLD use cases/scenarios you are
imagining for the device don't exist.

there is no reason to burden the device, making
it heavier, more cumbersome to handle etc,
etc.. for a use case that doesn't exist in the
real world.
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In the real world...
Ceridan 5th Apr 2010
When you take notes in class... you need to have something better then a crappy on screen keyboard.


Either a pen to write on the device (aka: what I use my current Touchsmart for) or a keyboard to type the long paragraphs definitions of some random thing like the LaplaceTransform (also can be done on my touchsmart)...


the iPad... scuse me, the iToy is not a student device... at least not for univercity student... Too small and a lack of functionnality to be a good old laptop, too big to be an mp3 player/quick email checker/portable agenda.
it is a fact that windows tablet
PC/convertibles have resoundingly been a
failure and rejected by the market place.

most smart student realize that writing with
good old pen & paper is superior to trying to
type as fast as your prof talks.. or using
crappy error prone writing recog.. it's just
waste of time and effort and people realize
that pretty fast..

for the use that most students will have for a
computing device i think the iPad more than
fills the bill... with the addition iPod doc or
bluetooth keyboard for essay writing...
for iPhone/iPod Touch.. i'm sure these will be
ported, improved and expanded for use on iPad
for those willing to put up with it.. as i've
said.. the market has spoken and the vast, vast
majority of people just want to type.. it's
faster, more accurate and people just prefer
it.. sure there is a niche market for people
such as yourself, but rest assured you are a
very small minority.. Gates and Balmer have
both admitted that tablet PC have been a
failure.. 10yrs and no traction at all..
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Why not let the students decide?
SkateNY 5th Apr 2010
Instead of relying on the self-satisfied
pronouncement from an anonymous poster with an
obvious bias?
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by this reasoning
Turd Furgeson 5th Apr 2010
why do people need an ipad they can do just about everythging on an iphone.
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and the iPhone precisely because of it's smaller
screen size doesn't have.. many of the useful GUI
element that the iPad has. e.g. split screen
displays, pop-up menus, floating pallets etc.. these
GUI elements make the iPad much more easier platform
to get work done quicker and easier than an iPhone.

you know what Alan Kay (you know the guy that
actually came up with the desktop metaphore for GUI
that we see on Mac OS X, Windows, Linux and other
varieties of UNIX said of seeing the iPhone OS..
put this on a 7 inch screen and you'll rule the
world.. Jobs did him one better, put it on a 10 inch
screen..

i find it really amazing that people are so insular
and ingrained in there thinking of what a computer
is or should be and what they think they need.. it's
pretty hilarious.. i can imagine all the people
laughing at kay and his team talking about main
frame this and command line does way more than you
can accomplish than with this new fangled GUI
rubbish... lol.. funny..
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Did he really say that? (nt)
John Zern 5th Apr 2010
nt
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The argument you put forth was you don't need physical keyboards. The added functionality isn't needed by your reasoning. I can take my iPhone to places where the iPad would be cumbersome. Therefore the added functionality isn't needed. I wouldn't take it to the ball game, to the mall, to watch my kids sports games or out for drinks with friends. I can do all those activities with an iphone plus take pictures and type standing up.

You need to get away from the insular and ingrained thinking of bigger computer screens is what you need.
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Nah.. that's not my point..
doctorSpoc 5th Apr 2010
my point is that you need a keyboard to do longer dedicated typing.. but almost all will also
require a chair, desk or table to do longer dedicated typing.. meaning that a keyboard dock
or a case that props the device up and bluetooth
keyboard would be completely acceptable in that
use scenario.

while mobile you wouldn't be typing War and Peace
so the argument that you need a dedicated
keyboard in that use scenario (to update a
document or send an email) is laughable at best..
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accessories
bret307@... 6th Apr 2010
In my mind, a add-on keyboard would be in the same category as have an external monitor for laptop computer. When you are at your desk, you can use things like external monitors, external keyboards, etc. When you go on the road, you just take your laptop, iPad, or netbook and leave the accessories behind.
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KoolAide, anyone?
Dorkyman 5th Apr 2010
Rather than say, "Hey, it's not that bad!" why not say it another, equally accurate, way: "Hey, the keyboard is not very good!"

What this device needs is a physical keyboard that comes with it, rather than an optional purchase. Then, to make it easier to carry both, and also to protect the screen from bumps and scratches, put a hinge on the keyboard so that it can fold onto the screen.

Oh, but then you'd have a Netbook, and we all know that Jobs says Netbooks are crap. Never mind.
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but have you actually thought it out?
doctorSpoc 5th Apr 2010
95%+ of the time for the use of this device you
don't need a keyboard and when you do (for long
typing sessions) you're going to do that seated
likely at a table or desk anyway.. keyboard
dock or bluetooth keyboard for this device
makes all kinds of sense.. making it heavier,
more cumbersome to use by adding a permanent
keyboard to it just doesn't make a lot of sense
if you actually think about it... there is no
reasonable reason to burden this device with a
permanently attached keyboard for that 5% of
the time when you are going to be seated at a
desk of table anyway..
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Blue tooth?
Ceridan 5th Apr 2010
Well from what I gather, the keyboard Doc is actually better then the blue tooth keyboard because at least the iPad is positionned correcly..

but then it transform the iPad into a crappy netbook(and since I counsider that netbooks are allready crappy... this makes the iPad a (crappy*2) netbook).
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for viewing angle for watching videos, typing
etc..
There is not any KoolAide here, it is personal preferences. Have you
typed on a iPad? I have not. Thus, comments we make about needing a
keyboard are conjecture nothing more.

Also, the iPad is a different product fills a different niche than a Netbook
and laptop. Just because someone, Jobs, says Netbooks are crap, it may
not be for someone else. Enjoy the product that best fits your needs.

Truly, you gain any position making a snide remark. Neither in print nor
in person does it present a good impression of yourself. Just saying
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Contributr
KoolAide...? What the...?!
zwhittaker 5th Apr 2010
Why do people keep talking about the KoolAide thing? It's just a powdered drink (from what I gather...) so what does it mean in this context?
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Drinking Kool-aide
Bugbyte 5th Apr 2010
http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=drink+the+kool-aid

You probably aren't old enough to have heard the reference. From the Urban Dictionary:

"A reference to the 1978 cult mass-suicide in Jonestown, Guyana. Jim Jones, the leader of the group, convinced his followers to move to Jonestown. Late in the year he then ordered his flock to commit suicide by drinking grape-flavored Kool-Aid laced with potassium cyanide. In what is now commonly called "the Jonestown Massacre", 913 of the 1100 Jonestown residents drank the Kool-Aid and died.

One lasting legacy of the Jonestown tragedy is the saying, ?Don?t drink the Kool-Aid.? This has come to mean, "Don?t trust any group you find to be a little on the kooky side." or "Whatever they tell you, don't believe it too strongly".

The phrase can also be used in the opposite sense to indicate that one has embraced a particular philosophy or perspective.
Alice: Hey, did you hear that Joe is working on the Nader campaign?
Bob: Yeah, he really drank the Kool-Aid on that one."

Randy: Did you hear Zack bought off on the iPad keyboard?
Dennis: Yeah, he really drank the Kool-Aid on that one.
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KoolAide
kenneth.kelley@... 5th Apr 2010
Search for "James Warren Jones" and read up the on Jonestown mass suicides!
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Was grape Flavoraide actually
Tigertank 5th Apr 2010
NT
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ever heard of sarcasm PEOPLE?? LOL..
doctorSpoc 5th Apr 2010
Date: 1550
1 : a sharp and often satirical or ironic
utterance designed to cut or give pain
2 a : a mode of satirical wit depending for its
effect on bitter, caustic, and often ironic
language that is usually directed against an
individual b : the use or language of sarcasm
synonyms see wit
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Zach, did you type this article on a touch-screen? There seems to be more typos than normal in this article...perhaps accidentally on purpose?
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Contributr
Email me them
zwhittaker 5th Apr 2010
zaw2@kent.ac.uk. Feel free, waste your time.
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Too many 'cannot do' issues make the iPad a limited use toy.
Dietrich T. Schmitz, Linux Advocate 5th Apr 2010
The risk that content providers face is that the mass majority still prefer to read Internet content for free and so will not adopt and embrace 'pay-wall' sources.

There will be limited use of a limited use device with a fractional market that will continue to fraction as more devices similar (or different) provide the same functionality.

A 'niche product' however you put it.
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disagree...
doctorSpoc 5th Apr 2010
1) people keep saying do i really need an iPad? i
say the real question that people will be asking
is.. do i really need a laptop or a desktop.. and
the answer for a large if the THE majority of
people will be no.. what most really need is an
iPad like device and some smaller number of people
will require a dedicated desk bound device with
more horse power.

2) we can see from the iPod that being 1st to
market with an iconic product that defines a class
of device can result in ruling that market
irrespective of what others come out with..

3) news papers, maybe, maybe not they need to get
creative and offer value.. but for visually heavy
media like magazines, comics etc.. i think the iPad
is a winner..

i honestly believe a few years out that desktops
and laptops will be the niche products..

people rejected the previous tablet PCs "touch"
devices because they used frankenstein converted
desktop OS's made for use with keyboard and mouse
and shoehorned to work on a touch device and people
saw right away that the usability of these devices
was/is horrible, need use of stylus etc..

Apple chose right in using the iPhone OS GUI for
iPad and just built on that 'from the ground up'
touch OS GUI paradigm..

it's going to be a while before MS and google (with
android not chrome OS) can recreate that.. apple
has a head start. and if you think iPad is
limited.. Google's forth coming chrome OS devices
are basically JUST a web tablet.. no native apps
except a browser.. now that's limited!! in light
of iPad.. google needs to think about improving
android to keep up with apple..
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We shall see, won't we? Only time will tell.
Dietrich T. Schmitz, Linux Advocate 5th Apr 2010
nt
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RE: The keyboard ain't bad: An iPad retraction?
Loverock Davidson 5th Apr 2010
The iPad keyboard might work well, but its the health issues you need to worry about. Be prepared for an onslaught of back problems due to people hunching over the table to type on the iPad. Probably some RSI issues due to the flat surface of the iPad as well.
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It's definitely better than the keyboard on the Fujitsu
Lifebook P1120 that I sold on eBay to drum up $$ for the
iPad. For the most part, the auto correction feature
makes the most difference in accuracy vs. speed. I am
quite satisfied thus far but will not be writing any
manuscripts with it.
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Does it really matter?
pauliw25 5th Apr 2010
If you can't send whatever you type to a printer, what does it matter how good the keyboard is? You are not going to be able to do any substantial amount of serious work on it anyhow.
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Your math doesn't add up
no_axe_to__grind 5th Apr 2010
You say: >> 47 words a minute through an iTextSpeed testing application. He managed to get 23 words correct yet only 7 words incorrect during his test.

OK, so that means he completed 30 words, indicating that he only typed for 38 seconds. That's not much of a test..
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Nothing compared to a real keyboard
Droid101 5th Apr 2010
You can't type on an on-screen keyboard without looking at it, which is the advantage of a hardware keyboard. You can type fast, without looking at your hands.
i think people that haven't actually used an iPhone OS keyboard would be
suruprised at how fast and easily you can type on it... the error
correction really saves the day.. you can just blast away and the error
correction takes care of most of it.. if it didn't have that it would likely be
terrible but it does.. so it's not. just blasting away isn't just faster, it it
actually yields better result than actually looking at the screen and trying
to get every key right.. but you wouldn't know that unless you've actually
tried it..
One of the funniest scenes in a Star Trek movie is in The Voyage Home when Scotty is trying to talk to a 20th Century computer, like he does back on the Enterprise. Since then, several companies, most notably Dragon, have worked on perfecting voice recognition software. I have tried a few VR programs but found them lacking when I used them about ten years ago. I found that I think better with a keyboard.

That said, companies keep trying and I understand that the quality of the programs have improved in the error rate.

I am sure there are app developers who can write programs to a voice recognition app that can use a Bluetooth or wifi headset. I am sure that with training for the iPad and the user, the error rate will get to an acceptable level. Or, you can use the soft keyboard for corrections.

"Computer, display the formula for Transparent Aluminum."

"Working."

Paul

PS: That computer Scotty tried to talk to was a Mac. Another Star Trek prophesy?
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Why the sales pitch ????
johnmckay Updated - 6th Apr 2010
All I read is how great it could all be if WE adapt our ideas, and WE do something different. Then add the apologists who throw in WE could use a dock OR WE could use a bluetooth keyboard. Just get-real please; The whole point in buying something minus a keyboard is that it shouldn't need one most of the time.

A phone: most of the time I dial a number programmed in somewhere, normally from Outlook on the PC, typed in. If not I use the querty keyboard on it, which is also handy for texting. Do I want a virtual keyboard... No.

A TV; no keyboard as it doesn't need one but it has a remote so maybe yes.

A PC... definitely should have one UNLESS there's no virtually no need for data/text entry. But then maybe this isn't meant to be a PC.. maybe it's a toy??

Unless the ipad is largely (and I'd say 90%) for display or manipulation by touch (hot spots/buttons) or gestures then I fail to see the point. And with zero multitasking ability there's even less point.

As I've said before; I love my HP Tablet functionality when I need it but it needs more in the way of a finger-touch-screen and get away from the pen requirement (except maybe for handwriting which I don't personally use). I do want to see more support; I do want to see more interaction AND I genuinely think WE can adapt to doing more in the way of touch etc.

BUT only when the technology suits the end-game and the end-user. The ipad is a case of the tail wagging the dog; and there are so many apologists only too willing to offer apologist stories like this.

Why are we even discussing proper text entry without a keyboard? Why would we even want to think about it? If this was April 1st I would seriously think it was a cracking wind up... sadly it just smacks of sales talk and less-than impartial bias to me.
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Touch typists have no problems at 73 WPM on the new iPad virtual onscreen keyboard. There is an iPad practice app to help NOObs get up to speed.

The iPad will be fine for students since it will last all day and can go everywhere with them.
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The message is clear.

The iPad doesn't have a physical keyboard because...

You don't need one!
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I have a similar conclusion
Glen Burchers 9th Apr 2010
I've used my ipad everyday since Saturday. I like the soft keyboard more than I thought I would. http://smartmobiledevices.wordpress.com/2010/04/09/i-may-stop-worrying-about-keyboard/

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