home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
Internet Surfer: Getting Started
/
Internet Surfer - Getting Started (Wayzata Technology)(7231)(1995).bin
/
pc
/
textfile
/
mac_faqs
/
typ_faq
/
keyboard
< prev
next >
Wrap
Internet Message Format
|
1995-01-30
|
18KB
Xref: bloom-picayune.mit.edu sci.med:51879 sci.med.occupational:176 news.answers:4667
Path: bloom-picayune.mit.edu!enterpoop.mit.edu!news.media.mit.edu!micro-heart-of-gold.mit.edu!xn.ll.mit.edu!ames!agate!zonker.cs.berkeley.edu!dwallach
From: Dan Wallach <dwallach@cs.berkeley.edu>
Newsgroups: sci.med,sci.med.occupational,news.answers
Subject: FAQ: Typing Injuries (2/3): Keyboard Alternatives [monthly posting]
Supersedes: <typing-injury-faq/keyboards_721370199@cs.berkeley.edu>
Followup-To: sci.med.occupational
Date: 16 Dec 1992 17:45:56 GMT
Organization: University of California, Berkeley
Lines: 515
Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
Expires: 24 Jan 1993 17:45:51 GMT
Message-ID: <typing-injury-faq/keyboards_724527951@cs.berkeley.edu>
Reply-To: Dan Wallach <dwallach@cs.berkeley.edu>
NNTP-Posting-Host: zonker.cs.berkeley.edu
Summary: everything you ever wanted to know about replacing your keyboard
Originator: dwallach@zonker.cs.berkeley.edu
Archive-name: typing-injury-faq/keyboards
Version: $Revision: 4.10 $ $Date: 1992/12/16 17:36:37 $
Special Note: Next month, I'll be going to a conference where a number ||
of these manufacturers will be represented. You can expect a number of ||
hopefully interesting information, then... ||
The Alternative Keyboard FAQ
Copyright 1992 By Dan Wallach <dwallach@cs.berkeley.edu>
The opinions in here are my own, unless otherwise mentioned, and do not
represent the opinions of any organization or vendor.
[Current distribution: sci.med, news.answers, and e-mail to
c+health@iubvm.ucs.indiana.edu and
sorehand@vm.ucsf.edu]
Changes since previously distributed versions are marked with change ||
bars to the right of the text, as is this paragraph. ||
In this issue, I went over things, fleshing out some of the entries ||
I felt were a little lacking. Otherwise, nothing much new, here. ||
Information in this FAQ has been pieced together from phone conversations,
e-mail, and product literature. While I hope it's useful, the information
in here is neither comprehensive nor error free. If you find something
wrong or missing, please mail me, and I'll update my list. Thanks.
All phone numbers, unless otherwise mentioned, are U.S.A. phone numbers.
All monetary figures, unless otherwise mentioned, are U.S.A. dollars.
Products covered in this FAQ:
Apple Computer, Inc -- rumors of a new keyboard!
Dragon Systems
The Bat
DataHand
Comfort Keyboard System
Kinesis Ergonomic Keyboard
Maltron
The Tony! Ergonomic KeySystem
The MIKey
The Wave
The Minimal Motion Computer Access System
Twiddler
Half-QWERTY
Microwriter
Braille 'n Speak
Octima
AccuKey
GIF pictures of many of these products are available via anonymous ftp
from soda.berkeley.edu:pub/typing-injury. (128.32.149.19) I highly ||
recommend getting the pictures. They tell much more than I can fit ||
into this file. ||
If you can't ftp, send me mail, and I'll uuencode and mail them to you
(they're pretty big...)
==============
Apple Computer, Inc.
Sales offices all over the place.
The following rumor appeared in TidBITS#149/26-Oct-92:
I've heard that Apple is working on a new mouse with more rounded
curves that users might find more comfortable than the current
mouse. That's not terribly exciting, but what is exciting is the
new keyboard Apple also has in the works, reportedly slated for a
January release. The keyboard should list for about $250, which
compares relatively well with the $185 Extended Keyboard II,
considering the extra hardware that goes into the ergonomics.
Like some of the more esoteric keyboards from small companies,
Apple's new keyboard "breaks" in the center, so that the left and
right halves rotate around pivot points. You can also angle the
sides when it is broken for maximum comfort, and the keyboard even
comes with palm rests. Although this is terribly hard to
visualize, and I don't have a QuickTime movie for you, I've heard
that the design makes typing extremely comfortable.
DragonDictate-30K (and numerous other Dragon products)
Dragon Systems, Inc.
320 Nevada Street
Newton, MA 02160
Phone: 800-TALK-TYP or 617-965-5200
Fax: 617-527-0372
Shipping: Now.
Price: DragonDictate-30K -- $4995 (end user system)
DragonWriter 1000 -- $1595 / $2495 (end user/developer system)
various other prices for service contracts, site licenses, etc.
Compatibility: 386 (or higher) PC only (3rd party support for Mac)
Dragon Systems sells a number of voice recognition products.
Most (if not all) of them seem to run on PC's and compatibles
(including PS/2's and other MicroChannel boxes). They sell you
a hardware board and software which sits in front of a number
of popular word processors and spreadsheets.
Each user `trains' the system to their voice, and there are provisions
to correct the system when it makes mistakes, on the fly. Multiple
people can use it, but you have to load a different personality file
for each person. You still get the use of your normal keyboard, too.
On the Dragon- Dictate-30K you need to pause 1/10th sec between
words. Dragon claims typical input speeds of 30-40 words per minute.
I don't have specs on the DragonWriter 1000.
The DragonDictate-30K can recognize 30,000 words at a time.
The DragonWriter 1000 can recognize (you guessed it) 1000 words at a time.
Dragon's technology is also part of the following products
(about which I have no other info):
Microsoft Windows Sound System (Voice Pilot)
IBM VoiceType
Voice Navigator II (by Articulate Systems -- for Macintosh)
EMStation (by Lanier Voice Products -- "emergency medical workstation")
The Bat
old phone number: 504-336-0033
current phone number: 504-766-8082
Infogrip, Inc.
812 North Blvd.
Baton Rouge, Louisiana 70802, U.S.A.
Ward Bond (main contact)
David Vicknair (did the Unix software) 504-766-1029
Shipping: Now.
Supports: Mac, IBM PC (serial port -- native keyboard port version
coming very soon...). No other workstations supported, but serial
support for Unix with X Windows has been written. PC and Mac are
getting all the real attention from the company.
A chording system. One hand is sufficient to type everything.
The second hand is for redundancy and increased speed.
Price:
$495 (dual set -- each one is a complete keyboard by itself)
$295 (single)
(cheaper prices were seen at MacWorld Expo as a show-special.)
DataHand 602-860-8584
Industrial Innovations, Inc.
10789 North 90th Street
Scottsdale, Arizona 85260-6727, U.S.A.
Mark Roggenbuck (contact)
Supports: IBM PC and Macintosh.
Shipping: In beta. "Big backlog" -- could take 3 months
to get one. Making them "as-needed." Made by hand.
Price: $1200/unit for the pair. Minimum order: 2.
Each of the four main fingers has five switches each: forward,
back, left, right, and down. The thumbs have a number of switches.
The idea is that your hands never have to move to use the keyboard.
The whole unit tilts in its base, as a mouse.
(see also: the detailed review, written by Cliff Lasser <cal@THINK.COM>
available via anonymous ftp from soda.berkeley.edu)
Comfort Keyboard System 414-253-4131
FAX: 414-253-4177
Health Care Keyboard Company
N61 W15150 Wigwam Drive
Menomonee Falls, Wisconsin 53051 U.S.A.
Theoretical New Address: N82 W15340 Appleton Ave
Jeffrey Szmanda (Vice President -- contact)
Shipping: Now. 30 day wait. Should be FCC approved by the time you
read this.
Supports:
PC
Mac
Planned future support:
IBM 122-key layout (3270-style, I believe) -- sometime in December
Sun Sparc -- possibly by the end of the year or January '93
Decision Data
Unisys UTS-40
Silicon Graphics
Others to be supported later. The hardware design is relatively
easy for the company to re-configure.
Price: starts at $590.
The idea is that one keyboard works with everything. You purchase
"compatibility modules", a new cord, and possibly new keycaps, and
then you can move your one keyboard around among different machines.
It's a three-piece folding keyboard. The layout resembles the
standard 101-key keyboard, except sliced into three sections. Each
section is on a "custom telescoping universal mount." Each section
independently adjusts to an infinite number of positions allowing each
individual to type in a natural posture. You can rearrange the three
sections, too (have the keypad in the middle if you want). Each
section is otherwise normal-shaped (i.e.: you put all three sections
flat, and you have what looks like a normal 101-key keyboard).
Kinesis Ergonomic Keyboard 206-455-9220
206-455-9233 (fax)
Kinesis Corporation
15245 Pacific Highway South,
Seattle, Washington 98188, U.S.A.
Shirley Lunde (VP Marketing -- contact)
Shipping: currently catching up with backlogged orders. By the time
you read this, they should be FCC-approved. Still, expect a
30-60 day backlog for your order.
Supports: PC. Mac and Sun Sparc in the works.
Price: $690. Volume discounts available.
Other prices for various accessories, including custom wrist pads,
foot pedals, etc.
The layout has a large blank space in the middle, even though the
keyboard is about the size of a normal PC keyboard -- slightly
smaller. Each hand has its own set of keys, laid out to minimize
finger travel. Thumb buttons handle many major functions (enter,
backspace, etc.).
You can remap the keyboard in firmware (very nice when software won't
allow the reconfig).
Foot pedals are also available, and can be mapped to any key on the
keyboard (shift, control, whatever).
Maltron (+44) 081 398 3265 (United Kingdom)
PCD-Maltron Limited
15 Orchard Lane, Each Moseley
Surrey KT8 OBN, United Kingdon
Pamela and Stephen Hobday (contacts)
U.S. Distributor:
Jim Barrett
Applied Learning Corp.
1376 Glen Hardie Road
Wayne, PA 19087
Phone: 215-688-6866 (NOTE: I had a typo here, last time)
Supports: PC's, Amstrad 1512/1640, BBC B, BBC Master,
should have Mac by the end of the year
Price: 375 pounds
$735 shipped in the U.S.A. (basically, converted price + shipping)
The cost is less for BBC computers, and they have a number of
accessories, including carrying cases, switch boxes to use both
your normal keyboard and the Maltron, an articulated arm that
clamps on to your table, and training 'courses' to help you learn
to type on your Maltron.
You can also rent a keyboard for 10 pounds/week + taxes.
U.S. price: $120/month, and then $60 off purchase if you want it.
Shipping: Now (in your choice of colors: black or grey)
Maltron has four main products -- a two-handed keyboard, two one-handed
keyboards, and a keyboard designed for handicapped people to control with
a mouth-stick.
The layout allocates more buttons to the thumbs, and is curved to
bring keys closer to the fingers. A separate keypad is in the middle.
The Tony! Ergonomic KeySystem 415-969-8669
Tony Hodges
The Tony! Corporation
2332 Thompson Court
Mountain View, CA 94043, U.S.A.
Supports: Mac, PC, IBM 3270, Sun, and DEC.
Shipping: possibly by the end of the year.
Price: $625 (you commit now, and then you're in line to buy the
keyboard. When it ships, if it's cheaper, you pay the cheaper price.
If it's more expensive, you still pay $625)
The Tony! should allow separate positioning of every key, to allow
the keyboard to be personally customized. A thumb-operated mouse
will also be available.
The MIKey 301-933-1111
Dr. Alan Grant
3208 Woodhollow Drive
Chevy Chase, Maryland 20815, U.S.A.
Shipping: As of July: "Should be Available in One Year."
Supports: PC, Mac (maybe)
Price: $200 (estimated)
The keyboard is at a fixed angle, and incorporates a built-in mouse
operated by the thumbs. Function keys are arranged in a circle at
the keyboard's left.
The Wave (was: 213-) 310-644-6100
FAX: 310-644-6068
Iocomm International Technology
12700 Yukon Avenue
Hawthorne, California 90250, U.S.A.
Robin Hunter (contact -- in sales)
Cost: $99.95 + $15 for a set of cables
Works with: PC only.
Shipping: now.
Iocomm also manufactures "ordinary" 101-key keyboard (PC/AT) and
84-key keyboard (PC/XT), so make sure you get the right one.
The one-piece keyboard has a built-in wrist-rest. It looks *exactly*
like a normal 101-key PC keyboard, with two inches of built-in wrist
rest. The key switch feel is reported to be greatly improved.
The Minimal Motion Computer Access System 508-263-6437
508-263-6537 (fax)
Equal Access Computer Technology
Dr. Michael Weinreigh
39 Oneida Rd.
Acton, MA 01720, U.S.A.
Price: InfoGrip-compatible: "a few hundred dollars" + a one-handed Bat
For their own system: $300 (DOS software) + "a few hundred dollars"
Shipping: these are custom-made, so an occupational therapist would
make moulds/do whatever to make it for you. You can buy one now.
Supports: PC only, although the InfoGrip-compatible version might
work with a Mac.
In a one-handed version, there is exactly one button per finger. In a
two-handed version, you get four buttons per finger, and the thumbs
don't do anything. You can also get one-handed versions with three
thumb buttons -- compatible with the InfoGrip Bat. Basically, get it
any way you want.
They also have a software tutorial to help you learn the chording.
Works on a PC under DOS, not Windows. Planning on Macintosh and
PC/Windows support. No work has been done on a Unix version, yet.
Twiddler 516-474-4405, or 800-638-2352
Handykey
141 Mt. Sinai Ave.
Mt. Sinai, NY 11766
Chris George (President)
Shipping: now.
Price: $199.
Supports: PC only. Mac and X Windows in the works.
The Twiddler is both a keyboard and a mouse, and it fits in one hand.
You type via finger chords. Shift, control, etc. are thumb buttons.
When in "mouse" mode, tilting the Twiddler moves the mouse, and mouse
buttons are on your fingers.
The cabling leaves your normal keyboard available, also.
Most applications work, and Windows works fine. DESQview has trouble.
GEOWorks also has trouble -- mouse works, keyboard doesn't.
Half-QWERTY (Canada) 416-749-3124
The Matias Corporation
178 Thistledown Boulevard
Rexdale, Ontario, Canada
M9V 1K1
E-mail: ematias@dgp.toronto.edu
Supports: Mac and IBM (but, not Windows)
Price: $84.95 (slightly higher in Canada)
Shipping: Now.
This thing is purely software. No hardware at all.
The software will mirror the keyboard when you hold down the space
bar, allowing you type one-handed.
AccuKey 703-961-3576
Vatell Corp.
P.O. Box 66
Christiansburg, VA 24073
(This info provided by Wes Hunter <Wesley.Hunter@AtlantaGA.NCR.com>)
Price: ??
Shipping:: I believe that they are not shipping a product yet.
Some arm twisting might get an evaluation unit.
Specifications: 2" x 7" x 12"; 2 lbs.; 8 ternary keys; characters
input by chording; emulates any conventional keyboard character set;
plug compatible models for PC/AT, PC/XT, and all CRT terminals; no
software mods needed
Octima (Israel) 972-4-5322844
FAX: (+972) 3 5322970
Ergoplic Keyboards Ltd.
P.O. Box 31
Kiryat Ono 55100, Israel
(info from Mandy Jaffe-Katz <RXHFUN@HAIFAUVM.BITNET>)
A one-handed keyboard.
Microwriter AgendA (U.K.) (+44) 276 692 084
FAX: (+44) 276 691 826
Microwriter Systems plc
M.S.A. House
2 Albany Court
Albany Park
Frimley
Surrey GU15 2XA, United Kingdom
(Info from Carroll Morgan <Carroll.Morgan@prg.oxford.ac.uk>)
The AgendA is a personal desktop assistant (PDA) style machine. You
can carry it along with you. It has chording input. You can also
hook it up to your PC, or even program it.
It costs just under 200 pounds, with 128K memory.
Braille 'n Speak 301-879-4944
Blazie Engineering
3660 Mill Green Rd.
Street, Md 21154, U.S.A.
(information provided by Doug Martin <martin@nosc.mil>)
The Braille N Speak uses any of several Braille codes for entering
information: Grade I, Grade II, or computer Braille. Basically,
letters a-j are combinations of dots 1, 2, 4, and 5. Letters k-t are
the same combinations as a-j with dot 3 added. Letters u, v, x, y, and
z are like a-e with dots 3 and 6 added. (w is unique because Louis
Braille didn't have a w in the French alphabet.)
===========
Thanks go to Chris Bekins <AS.CCB@forsythe.stanford.edu> for providing
the basis for this information.
Thanks to the numerous contributors:
Doug Martin <martin@nosc.mil>
Carroll Morgan <Carroll.Morgan@prg.oxford.ac.uk>
Mandy Jaffe-Katz <RXHFUN@HAIFAUVM.BITNET>
Wes Hunter <Wesley.Hunter@AtlantaGA.NCR.com>
Paul Schwartz <pschwrtz@cs.washington.edu>
H.J. Woltring <WOLTRING@NICI.KUN.NL>
Dan Sorenson <viking@iastate.edu>
Chris VanHaren <vanharen@MIT.EDU>
Ravi Pandya <ravi@xanadu.com>
Leonard H. Tower Jr. <tower@ai.mit.edu>
Dan Jacobson <Dan_Jacobson@ATT.COM>
Jim Cheetham <jim@oasis.icl.co.uk>
Cliff Lasser <cal@THINK.COM>
Richard Donkin <richardd@hoskyns.co.uk>
Paul Rubin <phr@napa.Telebit.COM>
and everybody else who I've probably managed to forget.
The opinions in here are my own, unless otherwise mentioned, and do not
represent the opinions of any organization or vendor.
--
Dan Wallach "One of the most attractive features of a Connection
dwallach@cs.berkeley.edu Machine is the array of blinking lights on the faces
Office#: 510-642-9585 of its cabinet." -- CM Paris Ref. Manual, v6.0, p48.