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TIME: Almanac 1993
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TIME Almanac 1993.iso
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010791
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1992-08-28
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TECHNOLOGY, Page 79Personal Touch
The notes look handwritten, but a computer did the work
Nothing impresses quite like a handwritten personal note.
Textbooks on business management stress that point, but writing
anything in longhand takes time, and busy people never have
enough of that. It occurred to Prannoy Roy, India's leading
pollster and the founder of a small New Delhi-based software
firm called Statart Software, that computers could be taught to
do the job. Two years ago, Roy brought together several young
software engineers to see if a computer could provide the
personal touch of a handwritten note by imitating a person's
script. The answer will be on computer-shop shelves across the
U.S. this month: a program called MyScript, which will sell for
Roy, who is applying for a U.S. patent, is convinced that
MyScript is the first program of its kind. It is also one of the
first Indian computer programs -- if not the very first -- to
go on the market in the U.S. Several American companies,
including Texas Instruments and Hewlett Packard, entered into
software-development ventures with Indian firms during the
1980s.
MyScript works by using a hand scanner to enter a sample of a
person's writing, at first just a few words plus the alphabet.
"If you have bad handwriting," says Roy, "this is great. You
only have to write well once." After that, whenever the person
types a letter, it will appear on the screen in his or her hand.
The completed note or letter is printed out on a laser or a dot
matrix printer, or by a pen plotter.
To make the product look as spontaneous as a handwritten
letter, the software inserts random discrepancies in word
spacing and margins. It also allows editing onscreen to add such
touches as crossed-out words or marginal notes. To appeal to the
U.S. market, Roy enlarged the script to suit sprawling American
handwriting. Roy believes MyScript's appeal will extend from
home use to business and public life. At least one politician
is studying its possibilities: Rajiv Gandhi, India's former
Prime Minister and a committed computer bug.