Mouse Not Required?
Chromose asks: "Being a system administrator by day, and coder/artist/gamer by night, my hands and wrists get their fair share of exercise around the clock. I've had lumps on the back of my hands off and on for a couple years now and just recently discovered they are ganglion cysts. And although pain and stress has been minimum up to now, I worry of what continuing everyday keyboard and mouse stress will lead to. Introducing FingerWorks. I stumbled across their iGesture Pad on ThinkGeek the other day and started digging for reviews. What reviews I have found exclaim how remarkable the products work, but not many reviews could be found. It sounds like the answer to my search for relief, and it sounds too good to be true. So I'm asking, who out there has used these things and are they truly a revolution in the making?" Yes, ThinkGeek is part of the Sinister VA Software Kieretsu, but if you aren't worried about it, then neither am I.
http://www.meetthegeeks.org/ourreview/fingerworksi gesture/
From what I can tell, it seems to be testing out as alpha and might not be quite ready for prime time.
How exactly is the touchpad on thinkgeek an improvement? You're still resting your wrist on something and moving something else. Seems oddly similar to a mouse, but I can't quite figure out why...oh I do wonder.
"my hands and wrists get their fair share of exercise around the clock."
Must resist urge to make pr0n comments.....
As the page you posted says, without actually saying it, ganglion cysts are basically harmless, and unless cause you problems can be ignored, I've had them for several years and they come and go without any problems, one doctor I mentioned them to said I could get surgery, but they wouldn't be guaranteed not to come back, and the traditional method of removal used to be smashing them with the family bible.
You can also get a trackball, I use the MS Trackball Explorer and work, and a regular mouse at home. Switches up the type of motion so your hand doesn't get so blown out.
......but if you aren't worried about it, then neither am I.
...I think you mean "than neither am I."
I think you mean "then neither am I."
"than" being for comparisons and all. Thank you Dan.
i could not think of anything clever.
After looking at this, I am sure glad I don't use Emacs. Although,one really has to wonder how the Vim gestures would look...
Sure, it was all from typing . . .
This looks like a great idea. To bad it costs, what, almost $200? Could something like this be done on a laptop touchpad? Granted its much smaller and so the gestures couldnt be as complex, but it would be a neat little software hack...
-- Senior Software Engineer, Attorney appearance services, locallawyerapp.com.
I really really really want an eye tracker myself, the cost has been prohibitive I have found for the lowly engineer. However, these might be helpful.
also the Ability hub has an interesting piece on accessibility.
The TrackIR GX looks interesting, although not as a mouse alternative, it can be used to make your neck hurt so you can script 17 actions with the movement of your head.
IBM has been working on an eye tracking solution, I remember seeing something on TechTV a while back, anyone know the progress on that?
After many years in the IT industry as an SA I began to have pain in my right hand.
I immediatly took some actions (new keyboard, comfortable mouse pads, etc).
Something else I did was to change the mouse to my left hand and declare it in my work machines as a left handed one.
At home I bought the most comfortable input device I could find (I settled for a Waccom pen tablet using the pen 99 per cent of the time) and carried on using it with the right hand.
All those changes eliminated the pain, I have been working like that for 2 years.
The workload in your hands is heavy, help them by distributing the work as much as poosible between both of them and ensuring that your hand does a little in a repetitive manner as possible (next year I may switch hands, devices or both to ensure the new changes don't become a new source of stress).
IANAL but write like a drunk one.
I dont know how Eneff comes to his conclusion, but here is what meettehgeeks says about this item: "10 out of 10:Its the Muttz Nutz ! "
i gesture/index.htm
Everyone who is not able to use the former link: http://www.meetthegeeks.org/ourreview/fingerworks
so long
nd
The checkbox said "Requires Windows 98, NT, or better. And so I installed Linux
"The cause of ganglions is not always clear."
Ganglions are caused by inner conflict. There is no direct connection with computer use.
It's a joke. Slashdot "editors" use than in place of then quite often.
Speaking from experience of having those damn things I suggest that you get to a doc's office asap and have them removed before they get worse. I waited over two years to have it removed and im left with a nasty scar on the upside of my wrist and about 30-50% weight abality in my right wrist. The worst thing about it is that the scar tissue is so bad that the bump from that is bigger then the lump that I had from the Cysts.
g
These keyboards have been discussed on /. before, but thankfully more than 24 hours ago. Check out the prior articles on FingerWorks keyboards for a lot more information.
The review I wrote is here. As a further update to their helpfulness, my keyboard died for no apparent reason, and they're fixing it for free (a long time after I bought it).
While it may be true that there is no direct connection, the ganglion in my wrist is often inflamed and sore after periods of lengthly computer use. It may not be the cause but it does directly effect them.
I'm a graphic designer and I have used pen-based graphics tablets for several years....(I used my first one in Windows 3.11).
After some period of adjustment, many people will use a graphics tablet as a complete mouse replacement....the only time I use a mouse is for FPS games. However, for most other games (and applications for that matter) it is better than a mouse. I feel I can move through the environment with less effort and more precision.
And repetitive stress is lessened. Much of the stress of using a mouse is in the way you rest. Most people assume a resting position when using a mouse that holds their first finger arched over the left-button awaiting the next click. However with a pen-based input, you can rest on the heel of your hand much like when writing.
Give it a try. The models from Wacom are the industry standard.
On my main workstation, I have a traditional optical scroll-mouse, a trackball, and an iGesture from FingerWorks. None of these is stress-free, but they all stress my hands differently.
When I'm getting pain using one, I switch to another for a while. Variety is the spice of health. Er... Something like that.
BTW, the iGesture works great. I use it as a track-pad that has right-click. It can do more than that, but I haven't really bothered to memorize the other gestures.
I certainly understand why you say this. However, the symptoms co-exist. One is not the direct cause of the other.
To avoid knowledge of inner conflict, people push themselves to be aware of something else. It is the pushiness that causes the bumps.
You are pushing too close to the edge. As a sys/admin, you probably haven't taken a real escape from tech in quite a few years. Your body is fighting back, hurting, letting you know that it has hit some limitations and is being prematurely worn down - and you ignore these telling signs.
... nothing with a button. It can be a cabin in the woods, or a beach house, or even a second or third world country - personally I like to go to Moscow, CCCP as the relative strength of the dollar makes my money go further and it is very, very beautiful (does require that I have a translator accompany me, find a friend in advance.) Go there for a month (no less than 4 weeks, more is better) to decompress your body, your mind, and your soul. You will come back a new person, literally. Your eating habits will have changed (hopefully for the better), your outlook on life will be calmer and better, and your body won't hurt anymore.
Back off.
There isn't a lot of gray area on this one Chromose - and all you other hackers that are looking for relief from your wrist / arm / upper shoulder / hand pain. The proper response to pain and damage in your money making body parts is not to slightly adjust the way you work to minimize the pain - it is to back off.
I suggest you find a place with no tech - no computers, ATMs, keyboards, pagers, even no push button phones. No televisions, VCRs
I suggest someplace where you don't even speak the language, but this requires that you have a friend there that can interpret for you when necessary - but it lets your mind calm down and renew while your body is doing the same. Bring comfortable durable clothes and very comfy shoes. Get out - fresh air, food, and sunlight are good for you and being away from the things that caused your RSI in the first place will give your body a chance to heal.
I have done it, and trust me it works way better than any tech solution. See the problem with using different RSI inducing toys to alleviate the pain caused by your current RSI inducing toys? Bingo.
Glonoinha the MebiByte Slayer
don't you mean "then in place of than"?
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I don't understand exactly why, but after a month of using laptop touchpads, I experienced long-lasting (and intense) pain in my right index finger, the only finger I used for mouse navigation. Cleared up a couple of weeks after I stopped. I used to get considerable wrist pain which I believe originated from keyboards with reduced tactile feedback. That's all cleared up since switching to one of those old IBM (clackity-clack) keyboards. Pain has subsided considerably; I'm sure not typing any less. The iGuesturePad sounds pretty cool, but I'd be pretty skeptical about claims that it reduces RSI.
A week out where there is no electricity and when you came back your right wrist was still bothering you as bad as ever. Methinks the keyboard and mouse might not be the problem - how do I put this lightly ...
Well when you translate Affeprügel it comes back ape flogging, but that was a close to monkey spanking as I could get.
Glonoinha the MebiByte Slayer
Sometimes I forget which of my plethora of xterms currently has focus and start typing in the wrong one. Focus follows mouse is nice (especially if it serves to endlessly confuse those who borrow my console), but sometimes I wonder if there is a better way. Focus follows eyes sounds like a good idea until I remember that sometimes I'm looking at a different window. So I have a brilliant new idea: Focus Follows Thought! My window manager will read my mind to decide which window to focus. Now, if only I can keep it from pulling up porn during the middle of the day...
How did the parent post get any "insightful" mods at all?
Bloody hell. Bush is winning. Never misunderestimate the unliteracy of supposed geeks.
"then" is the correct word there, although it could have been ommited entirely because of the comma.
what's worse than a spelling nazi? An illiterate spelling nazi!