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by dporan
5329 days ago
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Real, shipping stylus-based computers -- not just mockups or concepts like Alan Kay's 1968 Dynabook -- go back to at least the late 1980s, with the GRiDPAD: http://www.pcworld.com/article/188223/the_long_fail_a_brief_... Maybe the lack of success has been due to poor implementation, but I wonder whether styluses are just inherently problematic: 1. Truly reliable handwriting recognition always seems to be just over the horizon, and I wonder whether it always will be. Honestly, I often can't read my own handwriting. Sure, you can store handwriting as "ink," aka a bitmap, but that's like choosing a fax as your file format. 2. Switching from stylus to finger to (possibly) keyboard is awkward. You need someplace to put the stylus, and it makes one-handed operation pretty difficult. That said, I actually think I'd enjoy having a stylus for input sometimes. I hope that someone eventually figures out how to put all the pieces together. (Too bad that Microsoft Courier didn't make it.) |
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But yeah switching is a pain. and the interaction vocabulary has to be rewritten for stylus input.