Contents Introduction

Mouse

Keyboard

Foot Pedals

Skeptical Remarks

My Own Setup Related A Low-Impact Workspace A description of how a low-impact workspace can be put together using speech recognition and techniques in this essay. Voice: a Misunderstood Resource A billion people use keyboards. That is an extraordinary proof of how the human brain effectively meets the computer: through a set of symbols that are unconsciously combined. ShortTalk is designed according to the same philosophy, making it several times more efficient than current speech user interfaces. Background My motivation for researching user interfaces is a long-standing typing injury.

Input devices: a usage-driven approach Keyboard Pointers—self taught typists who hunt and peck instead of touch-type—...are the least likely to be hurt from their style. Pascarelli & Quilter in Repetitive stress injury From bitter experience, I don't believe that the keyboard can be improved much. Three times, and without success, I have built whole keyboards from scratch. Nevertheless, there are a few changes I would like to see done to the keyboard: A smaller footprint allowing more rest areas for hands and a mousing area closer to the center of the body.

Widely spaced modifier keys so they can be pressed by the side of your hand instead of requiring pinky contortions.

Mouse buttons on the side so as to allow a buttonless mouse.

A scroll tread or belt on the side of keyboard to make browsing possible without dependence on finger-skills. A large scroll wheel might also be sufficient instead of the more complicated thread mechanism.

A numeric keypad that does not make the keyboard as wide as normal 101-key models.

A flat design, akin to that of a laptop keyboard, but with 3mm key travel and good mechanical feed-back. Why keyboards have gotten less ergonomic For modifier keys, such as Ctrl and Shft , ergonomicity has declined. When they are widely spaced apart as on keyboards made in the mid '90s, these keys can be depressed easily with the side of the hand or with the outer side of the curled-up little finger, all while the thumb is facing upwards . In this way, the strenuous finger work usually associated with chording is avoided. Unfortunately, modern keyboards suffer from extraneous OS-specific keys that prevent this technique from being used. (Except if these keys are uprooted or lowered.) On a flat keyboard, such as on a notebook computer, fingers are even further restrained by the flatness from hitting keys in a variety of ways—something that is likely an ergonomic drawback. A keyboard layout proposal A keyboard layout following these ideas mentioned above is suggested in Figure 1. Below it's shown (left) how a large, comfortable belt may be placed on the left side of the keyboard, along with mouse buttons; the side of the hand (right), not the fingers, securely moves the belt. These ideas and the figure below are from AT&T Technical Disclosure A keyboard design by Nils Klarlund.

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