Talk:Virtual keyboard
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the virtual keyboard is not only sorftware, but also a laser projected keyboard
http://www.virtual-laser-keyboard.com/f-a-q.asp
[edit] other arrangements of keys
I've seen PDA software that shows little pictures of letters that one pokes at with a stylus, but the overall picture looks very different from a QWERTY or Dvorak keyboard. Should this virtual keyboard article talk about those kinds of "keyboards", or is there some other article that discusses them? (If there is some other article, please link this article to it).
A few examples of the kinds of PDA software I'm talking about:
- myKbd ATOMIK keyboard -- hexagonal "keys"; the most-frequent keys (space, 'e', 't', 'a', 'o', 'n', 's') clustered in the center of the keyboard.
- xkbd ?
- MessagEase Onscreen Keyboard (MEOK) (square layout)
- "Mini-Keyboard" (close to QWERTY layout, but with diamond-shaped keys)
- TouchMe On-Screen Keyboard: alphabetical order
- TouchMe: alphabetical order
- Curvette and Proximator keyboards: only displays consonants, then displays vowels after you choose a consonant -- use a "stroke" to enter a consonant and a vowel, or a shorthand-like path to enter an entire word.
- Quickwriting uses a "stroke" to enter a letter
- the Fitaly keyboard: the most-frequent keys ('e', 't', 'a', 'o', 'n', 'r') clustered in the center of the keyboard, with large spacebar.
- "The ultimate Soft Keyboard Roundup" lists more soft keyboards.
--68.0.120.35 04:16, 22 January 2007 (UTC)
[edit] virtual keyboard
the virtual keyboard is a keyboard made out of light. it is not on-screan but it can be connected to a PDA and hand-helds ect. it provides a keyboard when it is hard to type on the one you have 12.179.194.81 19:25, 20 February 2007 (UTC)