Google Adds Handwriting Input To Android
BarbaraHudson writes: The Reg is reporting on the release of Google Handwriting Input for Android smartphones and tablets: "The Chocolate Factory's research arm says handwriting recognition is needed because touchscreen keyboards remain modestly effective and while 'Voice input is an option, but there are situations where it is not feasible, such as in a noisy environment or during a meeting." The Google Research Blog notes that it allows recognition both on-device and in the cloud (by tapping on the cloud icon) in any Android app.
It works as advertised on my smartphone, so now I can type, speak, or scribble my searches, texts, etc.
It works as advertised on my smartphone, so now I can type, speak, or scribble my searches, texts, etc.
Did they add it to android or to google apps?
My faithful companion for 20 years has finally met its match. And just as it was starting to understand my writing style I have to consider a competitor.
But really, why has it taken this long to be able to write on a screen?
...omphaloskepsis often...
Not added to Android, but Google's fleg of "services" and "apps".
Besides, the Samsung Note line has had handwriting recognition (in the note taking app and in the keyboard) for ages, and it works really fucking well.
I'm pretty sure I remember how to do graffiti, and it's still better than any handwriting input I've ever used.
Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
Graffiti was the fastest way I've ever input text into a PDA. Second fastest was the Blackberry keyboard. A very distant third is the Android virtual keyboard that most people are using now.
Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
The only relevant questions I can think of in regards to handwriting input are "Who the hell owns the corpse of Palm?" and "Why the hell hasn't Graffiti been brought back yet?"
When you live in a sick society, just about everything you do is wrong.
Seems like a whole bunch of hand-waving to me.
Don't waste your vote! Vote for whoever you want, unless you live in a swing state it won't matter anyways
The best part about Graffiti was that you didn't have to watch the screen while entering text. When I travelled across Europe by train, was able to look out the window and enjoy the scenery while I wrote my travel diary on my Pilot (actually a Handera TRGPro with a compact flash slot). I didn't have to move my hand like I would with a paper diary. I didn't have to key my eye on the screen for when I hit the wrong key or auto-correct decided to change what I meant to write. It was a very liberating experience.
So what about ... a keyboard?
Indeed, it reminds me of non T9 sms input from the old style cellphone: once you got accustomed you could type with the phone in the pocket (useful in winter).
---- MISSING MISCELLANEOUS DATA SEGMENT --- [sigdash] trolololol
I guess this is needed for people who don't already have a Samsung Note.
"Nine times out of ten, starting a fire is not the best way to solve the problem." - my wife
I'm kinda hoping that having a handwriting engine allows them to do something useful, like OneNote-style integration with Google Docs.
Log in or piss off.
Google has added handwriting support to Android? And people complain about every single minor feature upgrade to iOS being big news.... for Pete's sake there was handwriting support in Windows Mobile and on Symbian a decade ago and it worked pretty well. Plus those guys weren't the firs to include this feature in a mobile device by any stretch...
It doesn't need either a "standard handwritten alphabet" like graffiti, nor really good penmanship, nor a stylus. I tested it on my smartphone with my index finger. It scrolls letters to the left as you complete them, If you're using it to make notes on what was said, why not just use the phone's speech-to-text and devote your attention to the speaker?
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You also pay a lot more for it.
"Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
Galaxy Note uses a handwriting as a premium value-add.
By Google making handwriting apps commonplace, any cheap Android OEM vendor can bundle phones with styluses.
Every day I'm on the MTR or the bus I see numerous people around me writing away on their phones. Handwriting input is the norm, not the exception. It seems to work pretty well, considering the very few corrections they have to make.
Or is recognising and distinguishing between those thousands if not tens of thousands of different Chinese characters really that much easier than the 26 letters (well, make that 52 to account for capitals) in our alphabet? I always thought they'd use handwriting input because it's so darn hard to input Chinese on a regular keyboard, let alone a mobile phone keyboard. In contrast, entering English on a mobile phone keyboard, combined with automatic corrections, works quite well for me, not as good or as fast as a real keyboard but I think I still type way faster than I could possibly write on a phone or other mobile device.
but it's up to you to decide what the implications of that may be.
It's like the Newton, but this one doesn't eat up martha.
Circumcision is child abuse.
Or is recognising and distinguishing between those thousands if not tens of thousands of different Chinese characters really that much easier than the 26 letters (well, make that 52 to account for capitals) in our alphabet?
Joined-up cursive writing in the Latin alphabet is very different from drawing each stroke of a Chinese character. I used to have a Newton MessagePad 2000 and it worked mostly because I stuck to manuscript (separate letters).
I've used 8pen on all my android phones for years. Much faster than handwriting or typing for that matter, and it can be used one-handed without even looking. Best $0.99 I ever spent.
Hello. I am interested in knowing about OCR of handwriting. As far as I know, it is not possible, at least of scripts such as Indic scripts. With Google Handwriting Input supporting 82 languages, including several Indic languages, does it enable OCR of handwriting? If so, how can this new technology developed by Google be used to facilitate large-scale OCR?
Until Microsoft decided to go after GO and cut off their airsupply with Pen for Windows.
They even do Chinese. But it may be easier than Latin language, after all, as characters are not linked (melted?) with each others.
The Sony Xperia Z Ultra has a handwriting recognition "keyboard" as well, and it can even recognize ballpoint pens and many other objects as a stylus. (No S-pen required.)
It's a bit bigger than a Note though, 6.4" screen. I keep mine in my jacket pocket and think of it more as a PDA than a phone, and use a bluetooth to answer calls rather than put it next to my face. :)