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By analyzing thousand of messages, a relational network of words is
generated.
Instead of an on-screen keyboard we have an on screen word tree. By
tapping on a word, it prints the word into the screen, and the screen
word-select move to the next position.
If there is no good choices, you
can kick up a normal keypad screen
and enter the word. It will remember your choice.
If lucky, the word tree will have a branch which across each node is the
sentence you want. Press ahead of the branch, and you automatically
have just entered a chain of words.
Dasher
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dasher Same idea, but with letters instead of words. Works pretty well. [Spacecoyote, Dec 23 2010]
[link]
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The tree should be a 3D freestanding structure, with a tiny one-word OLED on each leaf. |
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From the title, I thought this would be trees with keyboards - the human's version of animals pissing on a tree to mark their territory. |
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I've seen (probably thanks to a link from here) a text input
program for people with limited mobility. It basically lets
them navigate through a tree, with branches weighted (ie,
more or less distant) depending on the likelihood of the next
word. |
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Yup that's what it was inspired from, that version was actually "letter" to "letters" |
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Mine just skip the whole thing and go straight to words, as its faster... |
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And also we don't want to make people feel handicapped. |
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Many software keyboards, including my favorite (SwiftKey),
do effectively this, just displaying suggestions by word
instead of whole sentences at once. SwiftKey does
sometimes suggest a pair of words, though. |
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