Typist

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  • Review of Typist - It's Time to Stop Fumbling Around

    by 
    Ilene Hoffman
    Ilene Hoffman
    05.29.2013

    If you are tired of hunt-and-peck typing, you should learn how to touch type. The App Store offers a free program called Typist that will do just that. It won't relieve the tedium of learning touch typing, because there are no entertaining games or letters to shoot from the sky. This is a basic "type what you see on screen" program that follows the traditional way to learn touch typing. Typist 2.3 works fine in the two systems in which I tested it: Mac OSX 10.6.8 and OS X 10.8.3. It is just so quiet that it's unnerving. You hear nothing, unless you make a mistake, and then you hear a typewriter-type sound to notify you. You are then given the lesson again, unless you choose to use the odd interface to pick another lesson. You must finish the whole lesson correctly to move on uninterrupted. The screen shot below shows you the basic screen in which you choose lessons. If you don't know how to touch type, this program helps you learn, but as it cautions, you must practice, practice, practice, which is also amazingly boring. It's the only way to get better. I suggest you pick a soothing iTunes playlist to accompany your lesson while you plug away at this tutorial. To its credit Typist includes Dvorak Keyboard and Calculator Keypad lessons. The program tracks your strokes per minute, typing speed, error ratio, and time it took you to complete each screen. The simple Preferences include options to change the space after a period to one or two spaces, how large your characters draw onscreen, and an option to choose a different background color. On the Web, one space is recommended so as not to create gutters of white space in a document. The character size oddly includes Small (Fixed), Small/Midium, and Small - Large. I don't know why the options are not typed similarly, but I recommend that the developer correct the spelling of "medium." Capitalization in the preference titles is also inconsistent, which irks me. You can change the lavender default background color with a click on the color tile. It brings up Apple's color picker so that you can choose any other color. The developer, Takeshi Ogihara, could use some English language assistance for his short help file, but seems to cover most questions you might have. Interface issues When you finish a practice screen, you type any key to continue to the next screen. An Abandon Practice mini-dialog offers an odd box in which you click arrows to go back to the main menu or skip to the next lesson on the bottom of the screen. Does anyone read the Apple Interface Guidelines anymore? There is a Start Dictation command in the Edit menu which you can activate, but it doesn't seem to work. I was not able to deactivate it, even when I quit and relaunched the program. This seems to be a stock command provided by Apple that wasn't disabled in the program. What I like Typist teaches how to touch type in the traditional manner. It covers how to place your hands on the keyboard. It tracks your speed. The interface is easy to understand. What I don't like The interface includes odd dialogs and navigation elements. Takeshi Ogihara's web site has not been updated with information on the latest version, released in April. Typist never covers how to hold your hands. You need to keep your wrists raised off your desk, otherwise you can trigger carpal tunnel problems over time. I recommend you read this short article, Type Right - Prevent RSI and Carpal Tunnel Syndrome By Typing Right, on About.com or the longer one at the University of Maryland Medical Center.

  • TUAW'S Daily Mac App: Typist

    by 
    Megan Lavey-Heaton
    Megan Lavey-Heaton
    06.08.2011

    When I was in high school in the late 90s, classes such as home economics, shorthand and basic keyboarding were already a thing of the past. I could read my Japanese textbook much easier than my mother's shorthand book from the early 70s. She learned proper touch typing in school while I developed a very fast method of hunt-and-peck that got me up to 73 words-per-minute. Typist tries to teach basic touch typing. You can take a basic course and then progress to speed drills, longer exercises and the like. Two specific sections focus on the calculator keypad and the Dvorak keyboard. Typist's lessons are baby steps in touch typing. You get used to having your hands positioned properly on the keyboard, then build up from there. Stats displayed during the exercise show keystrokes-per-minute, typing speed and your error ratio. When you make an error, the program makes a sound to let you know you're off. You can repeat exercises until you're confident enough to move on. The lessons gradually grow more complex as you build your typing speed and capability. Typist is a free download in the Mac App Store, and it's an excellent program for learning proper touch typing whether you're a student just starting out, or an adult who never learned how.

  • Research suggests that your body knows you made a typo when your conscious mind simply can't be bothered

    by 
    Laura June Dziuban
    Laura June Dziuban
    11.01.2010

    This may or may not come as a shocker to you -- but when you make a typo, your body can tell, according to a new study at Vanderbilt University. The study monitored a group of people who could type at least 40 WPM consistently as they transcribed copy. In analyzing the typists' key strokes, researchers found that interestingly, even if a typist's mistake was immediately 'silently' corrected onscreen by those running the study, the typist's fingers fumbled or paused, signaling an 'awareness' that a mistake had been made. Essentially, this means that while the conscious mind may not know that a mistake has been made (especially if there's no visual evidence of it), the part of the brain that controls the fingers typing movements have some awareness of the mistakes. For those of us who spend our lives banging away at a keyboard, these preliminary results won't really come as any surprise -- the feeling of having made a mistake is pretty instinctual. Regardless, the results suggest a hierarchical manner of mistake detection in humans, the "lower" more instinctual part of the brain recognizing and correcting the mistake, while the conscious part of the brain assigns credit and blame. Now if we could just figure out what part of our brain is responsible for relentlessly pointing out others' typos, we'd be set.