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The Mobile Gadgeteer

Matthew Miller & Joel Evans

iPad: Inventing a new way to type

By | May 14, 2010, 2:10pm PDT

Summary: I realized the other day that typing on glass has inadvertently led me to create and use my own typing method.

I have been typing on computers and before that, typewriters, for years. In the beginning I would hunt and peck with one finger, and then over the years I invented my own forms of typing. I then focused on touch typing and have managed to almost clip 100 words per minute pretty consistently on a computer.

When I first got the iPad I tried the iTextSpeed app and managed 47 words per minute. Since that tine I have gotten faster but the most interesting part is that I realized the other day that I have invented my own typing techniques for typing on the iPad.

If you’re familiar with touch typing you know that both hands start on the home row and then go from there. Most times this technique works on the iPad but sometimes there’s a need to modify. Usually the need to modify presents itself when it’s not easy to find the perfect angle for typing on the iPad. At that point most people that I have observed either default to two finger typing, which can go pretty fast considering that the iPad offers a great auto correct, or they end up holding the iPad in one hand and pecking away with the other.

In my case I alternate between all methods mentioned above, but what I have found to be even more accurate is touch typing with one hand (usually my right hand) and then pecking out one letter at a time with the other. It takes a bit of getting used to but in most cases it ends up being a pretty efficient way to type.

If you haven’t stopped to think about your own typing technique, take note next time you start knocking out an e-mail. You’ll probably be surprised at how often you type with your own modified style.

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Topics

With more than a decade of mobile, Internet and wireless experience, Joel specializes in taking existing brands and technologies into the mobile and wireless space.

Disclosure

Joel Evans

Joel is a serial entrepreneur with his most recent business, CronkSoftware (cronksoftware.com), focusing on consulting and building games and applications for mobile devices. Joel has consulted for Microsoft’s Windows Mobile division and advises other companies on how to incorporate mobile into their existing brands and products. Joel purchases many of his devices and others are sent for review on a 30-day loaner basis and then returned to the supplier. If any devices are provided as “keeper” Joel will clearly disclose this in his reviews.

Biography

Joel Evans

With more than a decade of mobile, Internet and wireless experience, Joel specializes in taking existing brands, technologies and services into the mobile and wireless space. Joel is currently serving as the Managing Director of Cronk Software, Inc., a company he founded to offer full-service, end-to-end mobile strategy, design and development services.

Joel is the former founder and "Chief Geek" of Geek.com, a website praised by The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Economist, and others as one of world's best sources of information for technology professionals and enthusiasts.

Joel also serves as a technology expert for a number of well-known publications and regularly advises corporations, analysts, journalists and bloggers on what the future of technology will bring. He brings decades of relationships with leading game publishers, online communities and publishers, along with both hardware and software product management and delivery expertise. Joel can be found online as "JoelGeek" and you can follow him on Twitter @JoelGeek.

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RE: iPad: Inventing a new way to type
FAULKNE 13th Oct
Good day to confirm this comment I would appreciate T h e b e s t o f Z D N e t d e l i v e r e d your website very nice to everyone Yes, Oracle is the only one with shared-disk architecture, but that is there advantage. It means you can add or remove nodes and the database lives on. In a shared nothing architecture, if you lose a node, you lose the system. I'm sure Oracle appreciates EMC highlighting their advantage.I also desire to signal in your RSS feeds. Thank you as soon as once again and maintain up the great operate Awesome post! Thank you very much || thanks for nice content this is really benefit to me.
OK. This one first. HOW LONG can you type on iPad holding it with one hand and typing with another? I bet not for long. iPad was not designed for typing. Why bother?
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RE: iPad: Inventing a new way to type
condelirios 14th May 2010
Because he needs hits on his blog.
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This was kind of embarrassing to read.
bhartman36 14th May 2010
It would've been more efficient, honest, and easier to type on your iPad to simply leave it at:

The iPad sucks for typing on.
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RE: iPad: Inventing a new way to type
James Quinn 16th May 2010
@bhartman36
Perhaps but why is this a complaint against the iPad? I mean if a full sized keyboard is the measure against all comers then for years now the small keyboards on mobile devices such as phones should get equal billing from you and others correct? However I've not seen such nor did you include all others in your "sucks" comment above? I would also think notebooks would get a slam since they haven't included a full sized keyboard but another "kludge" in terms of a smaller keyboard that does not live up to the full sized keyboard.

On the other hand a full sized keyboard is not conducive to mobility I would think that is a fair statement as well. So everyone on this sight should agree basically that all keyboard virtual or not that are not full sized are a compromise to mobility right? If we agree on that then from there it is very subjective to what is the better compromise I would tend to think. I hardly think Apple's solution or compromise is the worst of the collective mix.

Pagan jim
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Two thumbs up
buddhistMonkey Updated - 14th May 2010
((( "In my case I alternate between all methods mentioned above, but what I have found to be even more accurate is touch typing with one hand (usually my right hand) and then pecking out one letter at a time with the other." )))

I do the same thing exactly. It's nowhere near as fast as touch-typing on a full-sized physical keyboard, but it's much faster than using a smaller, Blackberry-style "chicklet" keyboard.

Sent from my iPad (using five fingers and two thumbs)
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iPad vs. Blackberry
bhartman36 15th May 2010
@buddhistMonkey

It's nowhere near as fast as touch-typing on a full-sized physical keyboard, but it's much faster than using a smaller, Blackberry-style "chicklet" keyboard.

I have no doubt that typing on an iPad is faster than typing on a BlackBerry, but is that really measure to use? When Jobs introduced the iPad, he talked at length about how it was better than a netbook. I would think that would be the bar. Netbooks don't generally have full-sized keyboards, but they're a great deal better than a BlackBerry. The netbook is really iPad's competition. Everything I've been reading has said that the iPad won't replace the netbook for most people's needs.
and you've been at it since you first got your hands on it in April, what a waste.

Man, drop the iToy, it's making you no smarter.
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write like they know everything.

It's easy to be a critic. This is a really interesting article because IF the iPad is the magical device that Apple says it is that means it's going to CHANGE how we do things. If touch-typing with one hand and thumbing or something with the left at the same time is a new practice, Apple will have truly transformed a basic computing method once again.

Save the criticism, you are only showing your lack of creativity and discomfort with innovation and change. That would mean you are in the wrong industry.
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RE: iPad: Inventing a new way to type
bhartman36 15th May 2010
@mlindl

It's only innovation if the new practice improves on the old one. If it doesn't (which seems to be the case here) then it's not an innovation. It's a kludge.

Creating a car with oval wheels would lead people to drive differently, but it wouldn't be an "innovation".
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I'm not so sure about that
NonZealot 15th May 2010
@bhartman36
Creating a car with oval wheels would lead people to drive differently, but it wouldn't be an "innovation".

It would depend on who manufactured the oval wheels. If it was Apple, you would have MANY people on this site praising it as "magical". Meanwhile, those of us with round wheels will do very much what we do today, feel sorry for those so easily led astray. sad
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RE: iPad: Inventing a new way to type
e_blind81@... 15th May 2010
I've used the iPad with one hand... and I LOVE it. I'm visually impaired, and taking classes at UNM. I already know how to type 2-handed on a keyboard, and after a little practice, I've found that it is not only EASY to type one-handed while paying attention in class, but that the accuracy of the spell-correcting is simply amazing. I mean, amazing.
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maybe not optimum but you like it
Tony T3 15th May 2010
a few years ago I had a Palm Treo. I got a blue-tooth fold-up keyboard, full size, from Think Outside. It would fit in my pocket. None of these so-called solutions are perfect; when we really need to write more than a short paragraph, a real keyboard is optimum. I don't think I'm truly a fan-boy but I sure do love my MB Air.
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It's not inventing a new way to type. It's called, "Adapting to a hindrance."
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But, why do you need to type that much?
Roque Mocan 15th May 2010
... and why do you need to print? Apple wants You to write concisely and save the rainforest.
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I would never get a touch device
Daniel Breslauer 16th May 2010
My wife, to my amazement, loves her Android touch phone. I'm just puzzled and can only live with a (real) QWERTY device - Nokia E72 here.

For computers as well, I cannot imagine using something without a keyboard. I write quite a lot, so I would likely go completely crazy very fast.
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You know what, the iPad touchscreen would be fine for typing with decent software. But Apple ships the iPad with a positively moronic keyboard. While a normal qwerty board has five rows, and ALL of the normal letters and numbers and symbols are all accessible from that one layout with just a shift key; the iPad has only 4 rows, and makes you switch from the Letters to the Numbers to the Symbols layouts. This ain't an iPhone: there's plenty of room for a normal 5-row keyboard, or at the very least they could have put all the the numbers and symbols on the second keypad. But no.
.
And then: there are no arrow keys! Maneuvering around your text with their touch-screen text highlight function is painfully slow compared to just having a couple of arrow keys. Unbelievable.
.
So. You pretty much have to go looking for a third party app to replace the keyboard. What happens to "It just works," Apple? You need third party apps for nearly everything. Want to move files around like on a drive? GET AN APP. Want to open a simple PDF? GET AN APP. Want to print that Google Map you just drew up? GET AN APP! I could go on for 20 minutes.
.
I guess I am a little new to the new Apple get-an-app-for-everything way of life. I'm starting to wonder if Apple fans are so ingrained with this from iPod and iPhone use that they think it's normal and right.
.
News flash: it sucks.
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RE: iPad: Inventing a new way to type
James Quinn 16th May 2010
@ArtInvent
Are you actually admitting to being a foolish consumer? I mean I read this as your having an iPad then endless rants about it failing you but all those complaints if true were readily known to anyone who took a few moments to read the iPad specs.

Pagan jim
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I have admit that iPad changed my life style, like the PC appears, i don't know how to live without my iPad, wanna share my apps in ipad, they are free, but very useful.
Twitterific- if you must tweet, you could do worse than use this free client.
Pandora Radio- another iPhone app that takes good advantage of the iPad's larger display.
Pro Keys- This straightforward polyphonic or monophonic keyboard has two ranks, each with seven voices and simple effects.
WinX free iPad video converter- freeware to convert frequently used video files to iPad.
Adobe Ideas- Flash may be banished from the iPad, but Adobe isn't.
WeatherBug- This free app can quickly show you weather conditions anywhere in the world.
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The iPad was not designed for the creator of content, but for the consumer of that content. That means they weren't concerned about long typing sessions. I have a tough time with the very flat Apple keyboards on Macs, let alone the totally flat keyboard on an iPad - wait, never mind, they're not that much different except for NO drop of the key when you're typing on the iPad. I think you're totally on your own for this one - there is no accommodation for those generating a lot of text.
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Tweak the keyboard
warren@... 17th May 2010
I find it slower to type on the iPad than the iPhone - but haven't practiced. Someone mentioned having a split keyboard in the corners that you can tap with your thumbs. My preference is to have a modified Maltron keyboard.

Should Apple provide an API for developers to write a keyboard plug-in, then I'll write one from scratch - ideally suited for blind people. Seriously.

The cool thing about developing on the iPhone platform is that they *do* listen to feature requests, with an implementation cycle of about year. Before that, I developed on Windows and can't recall a feature being implement in less than three years.
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RE: iPad: Inventing a new way to type
jeff.fostermedia@... 17th May 2010
Once a again many people miss the point. The iPad can be what ever you need at a given time.
?????? a great video player or media display
?????? small and lightweight communication hub
?????? new age gaming platform
?????? an efficient web browser that responds to touch very well
?????? an art pad or musical instrument
?????? note taker and organizer
?????? ebook, interactive novel, newspaper, etc.
?????? travel companion
and "soft" typing setup.

It can become a word processor with the extra cool Apple wireless keyboard, but really that's a bonus.

So if you don't like this device, there are tons of other choices. But, many of us think it fits the bill for our portable computing needs. Really.
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