Well, the fault is not in Vista. Vista will only enforce DRM in DRM-protected products such as HD DVD-discs, Blu-Ray discs, DRM-protected vmw-files etc. Unprotected.avi-files will play fine. Vista does not do any kind of "forensics" on the file to check if it originally came from a DRM-protected format.. Vista is not a big step up from XP, but your allegations are simply wrong.
Will this layout be better for avoiding word-collisions in T9? This is a problem now.. It seems like the most often used letters are on separate keys. Does this mean that this layout will also be better for T9? Or is this only for "old-style" mobile text-input, where you press each key several times?
I guess the fewer keys will mean that this layout will be faster to learn than Dvorak.
Well, the fault is not in Vista. Vista will only enforce DRM in DRM-protected products such as HD DVD-discs, Blu-Ray discs, DRM-protected vmw-files etc. Unprotected .avi-files will play fine. Vista does not do any kind of "forensics" on the file to check if it originally came from a DRM-protected format.. Vista is not a big step up from XP, but your allegations are simply wrong.
http://recaptcha.net/
Change the dictionary if you want to text in other languages.. T9 is great. Much faster than pressing the keys to death without it.
Will this layout be better for avoiding word-collisions in T9? This is a problem now.. It seems like the most often used letters are on separate keys. Does this mean that this layout will also be better for T9? Or is this only for "old-style" mobile text-input, where you press each key several times? I guess the fewer keys will mean that this layout will be faster to learn than Dvorak.