Pen computing

Pen computing refers to a computer user-interface using a pen (or stylus) and tablet, rather than devices such as a keyboard, joysticks or a mouse.

Pen computing is also used to refer to the usage of mobile devices such as wireless tablet personal computers, PDAs and GPS receivers. The term has been used to refer to the usage of any product allowing for mobile communication. An indication of such a device is a stylus, generally used to press upon a graphics tablet or touchscreen, as opposed to using a more traditional interface such as a keyboard, keypad, mouse or touchpad.

Historically, pen computing (defined as a computer system employing a user-interface using a pointing device plus handwriting recognition as the primary means for interactive user input) predates the use of a mouse and graphical display by at least two decades, starting with the Stylator [1] and RAND tablet[2] systems of the 1950s and early 1960s.

Contents

General techniques of pen computing

User interfaces for pen computing can be implemented in several ways. Actual systems generally employ a combination of these techniques.

Pointing/Locator input

The tablet and stylus are used as pointing devices, such as to replace a mouse. Note that a mouse is a relative pointing device—one uses the mouse to "push the cursor around" on a screen. However, a tablet is an absolute pointing device—one must put the stylus is exactly where the cursor goes.

There are a number of human factors considerations when actually substituting a stylus and tablet for a mouse. For example, it is much harder to target or tap the same exact position twice with a stylus, so "double-tap" operations with a stylus are harder to perform if the system is expecting "double-click" input from a mouse.

Note that a finger can be used as the stylus on a touch-sensitive tablet surface, such as with a touchscreen.

Handwriting recognition

The tablet and stylus can be used to replace a keyboard, or both a mouse and a keyboard, by using the tablet and stylus in two modes:

Different systems switch between the modes (pointing vs. handwriting recognition) by different means, e.g.

The term "on-line handwriting recognition" is used to distinguish recognition of handwriting using a real-time digitizing tablet for input, as contrasted to "off-line handwriting recognition", which is optical character recognition of static handwritten symbols from paper.

Direct manipulation

The stylus is used to touch, press, and drag on simulated objects directly. The Wang Freestyle system [3] is one example. Freestyle worked entirely by direct manipulation, with the addition of electronic "ink" for adding handwritten notes.

Gesture recognition

This is the technique of recognizing certain special shapes not as handwriting input, but as an indicator of a special command.

For example, a "pig-tail" shape (used often as a proofreader's mark) would indicate a "delete" operation. Depending on the implementation, what is deleted might be the object or text where the mark was made, or the stylus can be used as a pointing device to select what it is that should be deleted. With Apple's Newton OS, text could be deleted by scratching in a zig-zag pattern over the text which the user desired to remove.

Recent systems have used digitizers which can recognize more than one "stylus" (usually a finger) at a time, and make use of Multi-touch gestures.

The PenPoint OS was a special operating system which incorporated gesture recognition and handwriting input at all levels of the operating system. Prior systems which employed gesture recognition only did so within special applications, such as CAD/CAM applications [4][5] or text processing.[6]

History

Pen computing has very deep historical roots. The depth of these roots can be quite surprising to people who are only familiar with current commercial products. For example, the first patent for an electronic tablet used for handwriting was granted in 1888.[7] What is probably the first patent for a system that recognized handwritten characters by analyzing the handwriting motion was granted in 1915.[8] The first publicly-demonstrated system using a tablet and handwriting text recognition instead of a keyboard for working with a modern digital computer dates to 1956.[9]

In addition to many academic and research systems, there were several companies with commercial products in the 1980s: Pencept, Communications Intelligence Corporation, and Linus were among the best known of a crowded field. Later, GO Corp. brought out the PenPoint OS operating system for a tablet PC product: one of the patents from GO corporation was the subject of recent infringement lawsuit concerning the Tablet PC operating system.[10]

The following timeline list gives some of the highlights of this history:

See also

References

  1. ^ Dimond, T.L. (1957-12-01), Devices for reading handwritten characters, Proceedings of Eastern Joint Computer Conference, pp. 232–237, http://rwservices.no-ip.info:81/pens/biblio70.html#Dimond57 
  2. ^ Groner, G.F. (1966-08), Real-Time Recognition of Handprinted Text, Memorandum RM-5016-ARPA, RAND Corporation, http://users.erols.com/rwservices/pens/biblio70.html#Groner66a 
  3. ^ a b WANG Freestyle demo, Wang Laboratories, 1989, http://rwservices.no-ip.info:81/pens/images.html#WangFreestyle, retrieved 2008-09-22 
  4. ^ Computerized Graphic Processing System: System User's Manual, Applicon Incorporated, 1973-09-01, http://rwservices.no-ip.info:81/pens/biblio75.html#Applicon73 
  5. ^ Newman, W.M. (1973-09-01), The Ledeen Character Recognizer, Principles of Interactive Computer Graphics, McGraw-Hill, pp. 575–582, http://users.erols.com/rwservices/pens/biblio75.html#NewmanWM73a 
  6. ^ Coleman, Michael L. (1969), Text editing on a graphic display device using hand-drawn proofreader's symbols, from Pertinent Concepts in Computer Graphics: Proceedings of the 2nd University of Illinois Conference on Computer Graphics, University of Illinois Press, http://rwservices.no-ip.info:81/pens/biblio70.html#Coleman69 
  7. ^ a b Gray, Elisha (1888-07-31), Telautograph, United States Patent 386,815 (full image), http://www.freepatentsonline.com/386815.pdf 
  8. ^ a b Goldberg, H.E. (1915-12-28), Controller, United States Patent 1,117,184 (full image), http://www.freepatentsonline.com/1117184.pdf 
  9. ^ a b Dimond, Tom (1957-12-01), Devices for reading handwritten characters, Proceedings of Eastern Joint Computer Conference, pp. 232–237, http://rwservices.no-ip.info:81/pens/biblio70.html#Dimond57, retrieved 2008-08-23 
  10. ^ a b Mintz, Jessica (2008-04-04), Microsoft to Appeal $367M Patent Ruling, The Associated Press, http://www.usatoday.com/tech/products/2008-04-04-2507619152_x.htm, retrieved 2008-09-04 
  11. ^ Gray (1888-07-31), Telautograph, United States Patent 386,815, http://rwservices.no-ip.info:81/pens/biblio70.html#Gray1888b 
  12. ^ Goldberg, H.E. (1915-12-28), Controller, United States Patent 1,117,184, http://users.erols.com/rwservices/pens/biblio70.html#GoldbergHE15 
  13. ^ Moodey, H.C. (1942-12-27), Telautograph System, United States Patent 2,269,599, http://users.erols.com/rwservices/pens/biblio70.html#Moodey40 
  14. ^ Moodey, H.C. (1942-12-27), Telautograph System, United States Patent 2,269,599 (full image), http://www.freepatentsonline.com/2269599.pdf 
  15. ^ Bush, Vannevar (1945-07-15), As We May Think, The Atlantic Monthly, http://rwservices.no-ip.info:81/pens/biblio70.html#BushV45 
  16. ^ RAND Tablet, 1961-09-01, http://users.erols.com/rwservices/pens/biblio70.html#RAND61 
  17. ^ 50 Years of Looking Forward, RAND Corporation, 1998-09-01, http://www.rand.org/publications/randreview/issues/rr.fall.98/50.html 
  18. ^ Pencept Penpad (TM) 200 Product Literature, Pencept, Inc., 1982-08-15, http://rwservices.no-ip.info:81/pens/biblio83.html#Pencept83 
  19. ^ Inforite Hand Character Recognition Terminal, Cadre Systems Limited, England, 1982-08-15, http://rwservices.no-ip.info:81/pens/biblio83.html#Inforite82 
  20. ^ Users Manual for Penpad 320, Pencept, Inc., 1984-06-15, http://users.erols.com/rwservices/pens/biblio85.html#Pencept84d 
  21. ^ Software Control at the Stroke of a Pen, Pencept, Inc., 1985, http://www.open-video.org/details.php?videoid=8023&surrogate=storyboard, retrieved 2009-05-21 
  22. ^ Handwriter (R) GrafText (TM) System Model GT-5000, Communication Intelligence Corporation, 1985-01-15, http://rwservices.no-ip.info:81/pens/biblio85.html#CIC85 
  23. ^ The BYTE Awards: GRiD System's GRiDPad, BYTE Magazine, Vol 15. No 1, 1990-01-12, pp. 285, http://rwservices.no-ip.info:81/pens/biblio90.html#GridPad90a 
  24. ^ Lempesis, Bill (1990-05), What's New in Laptops and Pen Computing, Flat Panel Display News, http://rwservices.no-ip.info:81/pens/biblio90.html#Momenta90 
  25. ^ Agulnick, Todd (1994-09-13), Control of a computer through a position-sensed stylus, United States Patent 5,347,295, http://users.erols.com/rwservices/pens/biblio95.html#Agulnick94 
  26. ^ Agulnick, Todd (1994-09-13), Control of a computer through a position-sensed stylus, United States Patent 5,347,295 (full image), http://www.freepatentsonline.com/5347295.pdf 
  27. ^ (– Scholar search) NCR announces pen-based computer press release, archived from the original on 2008-05-02, http://web.archive.org/web/20080502135338/http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0NEW/is_1991_June_24/ai_10957018, retrieved 2007-04-20 
  28. ^ (– Scholar search) Penpoint OS shipping press release, archived from the original on 2007-08-30, http://web.archive.org/web/20070830050237/http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0NEW/is_1992_April_17/ai_12165379, retrieved 2007-04-20 
  29. ^ Lenovo - The history of ThinkPad
  30. ^ http://www.computinghistory.org.uk/det/5046/Amstrad-PenPad-PDA600/
  31. ^ Trends at COMDEX Event 1999, http://www.guiart.fi/gobr01en.htm, retrieved 2008-08-11 
  32. ^ Microsoft (2005), Windows XP Tablet PC Edition 2005 Hardware Requirements, www.microsoft.com, http://users.erols.com/rwservices/pens/biblio10.html#Microsoft06i, retrieved 2009-03-14 
  33. ^ Fingerworks, Inc. (2003), iGesture Game Mode Guide, www.fingerworks.com, http://rwservices.no-ip.info:81/pens/biblio05.html#Fingerworks03, retrieved 2009-04-30 
  34. ^ MacEssentials (2007-08-02), Rubrik Apple: Das Lexikon der Fingersprache, www.mac-essentials.de, http://users.erols.com/rwservices/pens/biblio10.html#MacEssentials07a, retrieved 2009-05-16 
  35. ^ http://news.com.com/Go+files+antitrust+suit+against+Microsoft/2100-7343_3-5772534.html
  36. ^ http://www.groklaw.net/article.php?story=20050704045343631
  37. ^ HP TouchSmart tx2z, HP, http://www.shopping.hp.com/webapp/shopping/computer_can_series.do?storeName=computer_store&category=notebooks&a1=Category&v1=Mobility&series_name=tx2z_series, retrieved 2008-11-28 

External links