Apparently we'd all type a lot faster if the alphabet on our smartphones was
rearranged. But is it too late to teach old dogs new tricks?
There aren’t many inventions from the 19th century that remain in daily use across the world, completely unmodified. The flushing loo, the ballpoint pen and the safety match merit a mention. But one is so ubiquitous that most of us take it for granted: the Qwerty keyboard.
There aren’t many inventions from the 19th century that remain in daily use across the world, completely unmodified. The flushing loo, the ballpoint pen and the safety match merit a mention. But one is so ubiquitous that most of us take it for granted: the Qwerty keyboard.
Ever since it was first produced in 1873, we have stuck with it. First on clunky, mechanical typewriters with their pleasing chika-chip-cha-chip-DING-ziiiiiiiip, then with electronic word processors and computers. Even now, touchscreen smartphones and iPads all boast the distinctive layout, despite the fact that very few of us are dexterous enough to touch‑type on a device smaller than a cigarette packet.
Even the most digitally supple teenager tends to use a hot-thumb shuffle to bang out their texts.
And so researchers have created a new keyboard that they claim is designed
for people using two thumbs on a touchscreen device. Instead of Qwerty, they
have come up with KALQ. Dr Per Ola Kristensson – possibly because he has a very
difficult name to type (as I’ve just discovered) – says that the traditional
layout has trapped users in “suboptimal text entry interfaces”.
He and his colleagues at St Andrews University calculate that the standard keys on a touchscreen device limits typing to about 20 words a minute. With their funky new KALQ board, which has all the vowels on the right-hand side, users were able to get up to 37 words a minute.
This is an obvious improvement. But it is not that surprising, because many
difficult-to-spell pointy-headed academics, think the Qwerty keyboard is one of
the least efficient pieces of kit ever invented.
Indeed, if we believe them, it is a miracle that this article ever made it on
to the page. It would be quicker to scratch out my words using a stylus and wax
tablet, and shout the finished article through a cup attached to a piece of
string, than type it using a standard keyboard.
But the reason for Qwerty’s inefficiency is also the reason for its success.
Typewriters were invented by Christopher Sholes, a Wisconsin senator and
newspaper editor. His first attempt, logically, placed all the keys in
alphabetical order. But this meant that the mechanical levers, attached to the
keys, became jammed if someone typed too quickly. So, after many experiments, he
moved the most commonly used keys apart.
Thus the Qwerty was born. In fact, it was originally Qwe.ty – but then
Remington, famous for its sewing machines and guns, and which produced Sholes’s
typewriter, moved the R to a more prominent position.
There is no proof that Sholes wanted to slow down typing; he just wanted to
stop his machine from becoming a ball of jumbled metal. But the effect was the
same – typing using a Qwerty just isn’t very quick. Also, the spacing out of
common pairings of letters is responsible for millions of people developing
repetitive strain injury.
There are many other machines that allow people to type more swiftly and
safely, most notably the Dvoˇrák board (invented by a distant cousin of the
Czech composer), developed in the Thirties. Crucially, this version allows your
fingers to jump and stretch less and your left hand and right hand are used
equally – with a Qwerty, your left hand does well over half the work. The world
record for typing on this version is more than 200 words a minute, a speed that
would cause snapped fingers with a Qwerty board.
And if it’s supersonic typing you are after, you should have seen the old
stenographers at work at the Old Bailey, who used strange machines that worked
like pianos – they struck chords that produced phonetic sounds like “th” and
“sh” and could type more than 300 words a minute.
Qwerty has survived for the simple reason that it got there first and
provided a machine for a world that craved standardisation. This was the era
when a nut produced in Manchester would not fit a bolt manufactured in London.
As Professor Doron Swade, a computer historian, says: “The big lesson of
Qwerty was the fact that it was standard; it wasn’t the most efficient or the
most ergonomically sound.”
To anyone who touch‑types, using Qwerty is as automatic as handwriting.
That is why, despite its myriad faults, Qwerty must stay. It is hard‑wired
into our brains; to create two separate keyboards for different devices would
cause a major short circuit.
ON THE NEW SIDE
Touchscreen typists urged to abandon qwerty keyboard for KALQ
Smartphone and tablet typists are being urged to abandon the qwerty keyboard
layout for a new design it's claimed will make them more than a third faster.
Researchers at the University of St Andrews have developed a keyboard for
handheld touchscreens called KALQ that allows typing 34 per cent faster. It will
be released as a free Android app.
The team studied thumb movements and developed "computational optimisation
techniques" to determine where letters should appear on the keyboard.
"The legacy of qwerty has trapped users with suboptimal text entry interfaces
on mobile devices," said Dr Per Ola Kristensson of the University of St Andrews’
School of Computer Science.
The qwerty layout was developed in the 1870s and was popularised on Remington
typewriters. Many alternatives have been developed since, such as the Dvorak
SImplified Keyborad, which proponents claim reduces errors, is faster and
reduces the chance of repetitive strain injury. All challengers have failed to
usurp the qwerty layout, however, despite their advantages.
"Before abandoning qwerty, users rightfully demand a compelling alternative.
We believe KALQ provides a large enough performance improvement to incentivise
users to switch and benefit from faster and more comfortable typing," said
Kristensson.
KALQ is designed for two-thumb typing with fewer sequences of single-thumb tapping, and so the movement required of each thumb is reduced.
"The key to optimising a keyboard for two thumbs is to minimise long typing sequences that only involve a single thumb. It is also important to place frequently used letter keys centrally close to each other," said Dr Antti Oulasvirta of the Max Planck Institute for Informatics in Germany, who
collaborated on the research.
The computational optimisation techniques used by the researchers assigned every vowel to the right thumb. The letter Y, which can be used as a vowel or a consonant, was assigned to the left thumb.
Combined with an error correction algorithm, trained KALQ users were able to reach 37 words per minute, the fastest typing rate ever reported for thumb typing on touchscreen devices.
Android smartphone and tablet owners will be able to download an app from the Google Play store to adopt the KALQ keyboard. It will not be available for iPhone or iPad, however, because Apple does not allow third parties to alter the iOS keyboard.
No comments:
Post a Comment