World: r3wp
[View] discuss view related issues
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GrahamC 2-Nov-2010 [10434x2] | I don't think this sort of thing is copyrightable |
otherwise we would also still be using visicalc | |
BrianH 2-Nov-2010 [10436] | But patentable, yes. They didn't have software patents in the visicalc days. |
Maxim 2-Nov-2010 [10437] | of course it is. if some can patent double clicking on a portable device icon.. this most assuredly yes. |
GrahamC 2-Nov-2010 [10438] | some countries software patents are not enforceable |
Maxim 2-Nov-2010 [10439] | and in fact, this is one of the cases where a patent is used in its rightfull way.. this is truely an invention, original and even fully developped. |
GrahamC 2-Nov-2010 [10440] | I doubt it .. gestures for letters have been around for a long time |
Maxim 2-Nov-2010 [10441] | though the result seems easy to reproduce, the research and the original idea of how this is being approached is very nice. |
GrahamC 2-Nov-2010 [10442] | it's evolution ... not revolution |
Maxim 2-Nov-2010 [10443] | since its not really gestures in the way I'm used to understand them. |
GrahamC 2-Nov-2010 [10444] | builds on prior art |
Maxim 2-Nov-2010 [10445] | not really.. the only prior art it shares is in the fact that you scrub your fingers.. its not actually using shapes, but a very simple clockwise counting algorythm. |
GrahamC 2-Nov-2010 [10446x2] | if you draw a semblance of a g and it turns it into a g .. what's new about that? |
the only new thing is some lines on the screen :) | |
Maxim 2-Nov-2010 [10448] | you don't draw a semblence of a G... you start up and turn left or right from 90 to 360 degres. |
GrahamC 2-Nov-2010 [10449x3] | looks like a shorthand g to me |
for those who learnt shorthand | |
so I would say both shorthand and gestures constitute prior art | |
Maxim 2-Nov-2010 [10452x4] | no.. all letters are produced using the same gesture... turning clockwise or counter-clockwise.. its very smart. |
that's it. | |
no special shape detection nothing actually mathy about it. | |
its probably doable in 100 rebol lines of code :-) | |
GrahamC 2-Nov-2010 [10456] | well, I guess the answer lies in whether their patent application succeeds or not |
Maxim 2-Nov-2010 [10457] | yep.. but patent reviewers actually do not really research these things for more than one hour... so unless someone challenges it, and the claims are different than other alternate character entry solutions, then they probably have an almost certainty in getting it. it will be very easy to defend also, because its SO simple and doesn't rely on math algorythm just a dirt simple idea which I have never seen before. this being said, its possible that the idea itself isn't new within this research field, but I've never seen this in a commercial form before. |
GrahamC 2-Nov-2010 [10458] | I can imagine that HP will object |
Henrik 3-Nov-2010 [10459] | Did they perform the staircase test? Can it be used while walking up and down a flight of stairs? Looks ok, but they made one mistake in assigning space to letting go of the gesture area at the center. That's too specific for a bumbling train ride, or where you can only pay partial attention to your device. Also, blind-typing and locating the center spot probably won't work. It's once again, not just the size of hands that are the problem, but the much more varied environment, in which you are operating your device. |
GrahamC 3-Nov-2010 [10460] | You could glue a pimple on the screen |
AdrianS 3-Nov-2010 [10461] | I watched the video and I'm not too impressed. Something like swype seems to work a lot faster. With that you define a whole word in one continuous stroke |
Izkata 3-Nov-2010 [10462] | But I've also had issues with Swype whenever I tried to use a word not in its dictionary. Using SwiftKey for now, but 8pen is something I'm considering trying. |
Maxim 3-Nov-2010 [10463] | henrik, try typing on a (small) touchscreen when shacking, its even worse, this device doesn't need to be precise, which is the point. now one thing they don't mention is that our brain has an internal "rest position" hard-wired, and that is where the center dot is very well tought. whenever you move any part of you body, the moment you stop thinking about it, it goes back to its rest position by itself. this is very obvious when you swipe you mouse quickly, you hand will go back to its original position by reflex. so using this in a shacky environment, where I can squeeze the device in my hand will, IMHO, be much easier to use quickly. its obvious it takes a little bit of time for your brain to associate the letters to direction and rotation amount, but since doing the next letter is just a question of going back to the rest position, I feel its very fast and easy to get used to. |
Maxim 4-Nov-2010 [10464x3] | view layout [box 200x200 effect [ draw [ push [ scale 0.106 0.106 pen black fill-pen red line-width 14 box 0x0 1000x1000 fill-pen white pen none circle 500x500 170 ] ] ]] |
can anyone tell me how I can improve the rendering of the above circle ? its extremely ugly . this is directly related to the use of the SCALE in the draw block. as the scale chanes, it seems that the quality of the circle improves... but I need this to be pretty when its small as well as when its very large. | |
chanes = increases | |
Gabriele 4-Nov-2010 [10467x2] | the real question (which I posted on FB as well, but in italian as I was commenting a friend's link), is whether there is any proof that this is "better" than swype |
it's a bit like dvorak - as much as i like it, use it, and prefer it to qwerty, there is no actual independent study that proves that it is "better" | |
Maxim 4-Nov-2010 [10469] | well, swype does require you to "aim" the letters... 8pen could be used by a blind person within a short time. |
Gabriele 4-Nov-2010 [10470x2] | you're now making it special purpose. don't forget that a lot of people already know the qwerty layout so "aiming" the letters is pretty natural. then there was also that other input method where it could figure out what you type even without a keyboard on screen (forgot the name) |
here it is: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M9b8NlMd79w | |
GrahamC 4-Nov-2010 [10472x2] | sounds like you could combine the two .. but the reason I posted the link is because I thought it could be easily programmed in R |
Whether some is better than something else appears to matter little when determining popularity | |
Cyphre 4-Nov-2010 [10474] | Maxim, re SCALE that is a known issue in R2 DRAW. Not sure when(if) will be fixed...use R3 ;) |
Gabriele 4-Nov-2010 [10475] | Graham, I never talked about popularity, indeed. :) |
GrahamC 4-Nov-2010 [10476] | Gab, fact is .. I don't read Italian :) |
Gabriele 5-Nov-2010 [10477] | lol... i meant, in the discussion here. :-) |
amacleod 20-Nov-2010 [10478x2] | I'm getting some strange giberish characters when I clear a drop-down by filing it with "". Is there a better way to do it? |
Found the prob... I was using "Clear myropdowndata" Changed it the "Mydropdowndata: [ ] Seemed to affect other fields as well | |
GrahamC 20-Nov-2010 [10480] | try clear head mydropdowndata/data if using rebgui |
Gregg 22-Nov-2010 [10481] | Sometimes, not sure with dropdown data, you need to update the line-list facet as well. A few styles force you to work with their internals this way, when doing more than simple UIs. |
Endo 1-Dec-2010 [10482] | In View 2.7.7.3.1, get-net-info function gives the following error: ** Script Error: get-reg has no value ** Where: get-net-info ** Near: def-mailer: get-reg/hkcr "mailto\shell\open\command" "" |
Oldes 1-Dec-2010 [10483] | I guess GET-NET-INFO is some left over from REBOL's boot and should be unset when it finish. It's same as in 2.7.6 |
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