Is this even possible?
Apparently you write the word on a piece of paper, and then the pen displays the article from a memory dump containing the top 100,000 English Wikipedia articles.
It's very cheap, too, so it would make a neat novelty gift to the Wikipedian who already has the mugs and t-shirts.
http://www.livescribe.com/store/20070723002/wikipedia-en/p-545.htm
From LiveScribe's website:
"The Echo™ and Pulse™ smartpens work only with Livescribe™ dot paper. Use it to activate all smartpen applications."
Dot paper (while I'm not completely sure what it is) is apparently a crucial element in utilizing the smartpen.
The product being sold here isn't the pen itself, but an app to install on the smartpen.
God bless, Bob
On 2/25/2011 9:59 AM, Tony Sidaway wrote:
Is this even possible?
Apparently you write the word on a piece of paper, and then the pen displays the article from a memory dump containing the top 100,000 English Wikipedia articles.
It's very cheap, too, so it would make a neat novelty gift to the Wikipedian who already has the mugs and t-shirts.
http://www.livescribe.com/store/20070723002/wikipedia-en/p-545.htm
WikiEN-l mailing list WikiEN-l@lists.wikimedia.org To unsubscribe from this mailing list, visit: https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikien-l
On Sat, Feb 26, 2011 at 11:51 AM, Bob the Wikipedian bobthewikipedian@gmail.com wrote:
Dot paper (while I'm not completely sure what it is) is apparently a crucial element in utilizing the smartpen.
From what I've heard, dot paper is paper with tiny dots that the
digital pen can use to orient itself. The idea is you write stuff with the pen, and you can see what you've written (it's a normal pen), but you also create an electronic trace (thanks to the dots). Throw some OCR at that, and some storage, and it's pretty easy to do this Wikipedia app.
Question is: why would this be useful? Seems a weird use case: waste dot paper writing the name of the article I want to look up, rather than just searching for it on my smartphone...
Incidentally, as far back as 2001 I remember exchange students having pens that let you scan a printed word, and it would look up that text, and give you the definition. So it's not particularly cutting edge technology.
Steve
How about a pen that you can use to *edit* Wikipedia? No, wait, that takes longer than typing doesn't it?
I'm waiting for the app that let's you edit Wikipedia just by *thinking* (or indeed any application that you can use just by thinking - some are sort of available already for paraplegics, but the technology is still in its infancy).
http://www.technoscan.com/tracking.php?ID=15 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brain%E2%80%93computer_interface http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human-computer_interaction http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neuroprosthetics
None of those seem to cover eyeball movement technology.
This does, but not the application to paraplegics:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eye_tracking
Here's an interesting page (and an interesting wiki site as well):
http://abilitynet.wetpaint.com/page/Eye+Pointing
The closest I could get to anything similar on Wikipedia was one line here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Assistive_technology
But I'm probably searching using the wrong terms.
Carcharoth
On Sat, Feb 26, 2011 at 6:14 AM, Steve Bennett stevagewp@gmail.com wrote:
On Sat, Feb 26, 2011 at 11:51 AM, Bob the Wikipedian bobthewikipedian@gmail.com wrote:
Dot paper (while I'm not completely sure what it is) is apparently a crucial element in utilizing the smartpen.
From what I've heard, dot paper is paper with tiny dots that the digital pen can use to orient itself. The idea is you write stuff with the pen, and you can see what you've written (it's a normal pen), but you also create an electronic trace (thanks to the dots). Throw some OCR at that, and some storage, and it's pretty easy to do this Wikipedia app.
Question is: why would this be useful? Seems a weird use case: waste dot paper writing the name of the article I want to look up, rather than just searching for it on my smartphone...
Incidentally, as far back as 2001 I remember exchange students having pens that let you scan a printed word, and it would look up that text, and give you the definition. So it's not particularly cutting edge technology.
Steve
WikiEN-l mailing list WikiEN-l@lists.wikimedia.org To unsubscribe from this mailing list, visit: https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikien-l