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Single-handed, Offline, Portable Data Input?

One Armed Bandit asks: "By now everyone knows the available single handed keyboard alternatives. What I've not seen available is a true portable one-handed offline input device. Gary Friedman's final concept for the DataEgg is a fantastic one. Unfortunately, it never made it to the market. I - for one - would pay a premium for this kind of device. I think one of the reasons that this hasn't been built is because of the requirement for users to learn a new input mechanism. In my experience, this is a more difficult perception to overcome than a skill to acquire. How many of you can navigate your various electronic devices by touch? Is anything on the market? Does anyone have a pet project?"

"The high points would be:

  • Single handed operation (probably chorded)
  • Local file storage
  • On-board display for visual feedback and document review
  • Uplink to host (USB, IR, Wireless)
I can't count the occasions which I'm walking down a noisy street (hence no voice recognition) and dying to jot down my stream of consciousness (without using two hands for a stylus and walking in front of a bus)? I would kill for something like this!"

12 of 39 comments (clear)

  1. There would be more of them but . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    The user base keeps going blind.

  2. Cell phone with noise cancelling headset. by Godeke · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Even in a noisy environment, you can take audible notes if you have a nose cancelling headset. With the exception of car horns, the traffic can't be heard. However, you also look like a homeless person jabbering to invisible people even more than the usual headphone+cell phone geek, because the normal cell phone pattern of speaking goes away. Nothing like randomly beginning to speak into the air to freak the locals out...

    --
    Sig under construction since 1998.
    1. Re:Cell phone with noise cancelling headset. by unitron · · Score: 2, Funny
      "...if you have a nose cancelling headset."

      Are you sure you're wearing that thing the right way?

      --

      I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.

  3. KISS by falsification · · Score: 4, Funny
    Single-handed, Offline, Portable Data Input?

    I don't know. I happen to like PEN AND PAPER.

    1. Re:KISS by p4ul13 · · Score: 2
      Very helpful suggestion. Well except that he'd need two hands for a pad of paper and pen. If it wasn't the case, he already said he'd use something like a PDA.

      Try some of these

      --
      Paul Lenhart writes words!
  4. Handykey by rqqrtnb · · Score: 4, Informative

    Handykey, in New York, used to make a device that was both a keyboard and mouse. I got mine about 3 years ago, it had DOS drivers and they apparently came out with Windows and PS/2 drivers later. Plugs into the serial port for data, the keyboard port for power (only drew 9 mA or so.) It's chord based, most characters are two fingers, with the modifiers on the thumb; it had a velcro strap to wrap around the back of your hand to hold it in place.

    There used to be a FAQ about such keyboards; look at any of the RSI resources. Also look at the pages about the "Behemoth" nee' "Winnebiko" project, they used the one of the "bat" keyboard sticks.

    You might also look at some of the one-handed layouts for conventional typewriters that Dvorak came up with, along with the more well known layout. It depends on what you're trying to do...

  5. ASCII chording keyboards by rqqrtnb · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I remember from the early days of microcomputers, when real programmers used toggle switches and keyboards were outrageously expensive, there was a one-handed ASCII keyboard. It was a sphere with four finger buttons and eight thumb buttons. One was supposed to play a chord with the fingers, giving eight bits, and then press one of the thumb buttons, giving three more. It was attractive to a lot of people because the small number of moving parts made it cheap. You might be able to find one used. It would take a lot of training to use, and it might be very hard to get any amount of speed, but it's worth investigating.

    There was a commercially-produced keyboard of this form, known as the MicroWriter. It was - probably still is - quite popular among blind/disabled/special-needs users, though that was not its primary market.

    First incarnation was a hand-sized device with 6 keys (only the thumb had to move) with about 8K of RAM and an 1802 processor. It was intended for use as a portable word-processor. The same mechanics and case were used as an auxiliary keyboard for the BBC Micro (using a resistor network on the switches, fed to an analogue input port on the micro).

  6. CyKey by FesterDaFelcher · · Score: 5, Informative

    CyKey uses a wirless connection to a PDA. Leave the PDA in your pocket, have the CyKey in one hand, and you are ready to Rock, I mean WALK!

    --
    My user number is prime. Is yours?
  7. a fancy new mobile phone by keot · · Score: 2, Interesting

    when i'm around the house, listening to the radio away from my machine and i hear a song i like, i take out my mobile phone, use the shortcut to load a text editor, tap the song name in using t9 predictive text input, and hit 'send via bluetooth' and it's on my machine for when i return.
    you can operate it single handedly, it has local file storage, a display and can trasmit data via bluetooth or irda or even email if you want to pay.
    it can also act as a telecommunications device. modern phones like the siemens s55 also act as dictation machines should you get the oppotunity to speak.

  8. big deal by ajagci · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Another chorded one-handed input device, like we didn't have enough of them already.

    What would be nice to have would be a chorded one-handed keyboard with Bluetooth. A small display would then go into the glasses or into a wrist watch. That's a much more convenient arrangement than putting everything into a single "data egg" (with a proprietary and patented layout to boot).

  9. morse code by NateTech · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I can't resist...

    Put a morse code key between your fingers. A simple microcontroller could translate to ASCII and store on Flash.

    A little shorthand to shorten up longer words and you're set.

    Not efficient, but very cool.

    --
    +++OK ATH
  10. KISS again by it0 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    What about a mobile phone, especially 1 with T9 text input?