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The Evolution of Input

THE EVOLUTION CU L8RI OF INPUT See yal :) Since humans learned to write, they have sought new and better ways of doing it. From stone to clay, papyrus to wax, and paper to screens, people have tried a variety of approaches throughout history. The Ancients The Seribe An important profession in the ancient Near East Craftsmen, including a scribe, in the workshop of Pharaoh Amenhotep II. CHi cia Tars MEDITERRANEAN SEA Crete ezaca ineve Dolam Sesh Shofer dreesiur Dubsar Ecbatapa Tre Megiddd Dainasaus ISRAEL The role of the shofer persists today as these scribes produce the scrolls of the Torah. MESOPOTAMIA Gaz rusalem Babyton Typically a male from an elite A hereditary male role, these men were expected to master not only writing, but also arithmetic. Momenghis Pelusium Mphis * Dubsar * Sesh * Shofer household, his education would begin at the e-dubba. Thebes The Classical World The rise of literacy in Greece and Rome necessitated efficient book production methods. .UT.\BUNTUR PSl DD で 4TH CENTURY BCE トい 1 The Greeks introduce stenography, an abbreviated form of writing that is an important advancement in transcription. 3 & ROME large numbers of scribes, often Greek slaves listen to a single reader and transcribe the words into books to be sold by a publisher. Marcus Tullius Tiro, a freed Roman slave, develops the Tironian method, which is used for 1000+ years, and includes such modern symbols as the ampersand. Medieval Europe Early-Modern Times 1500-1800 AD 400-1400 AD Literacy becomes more common, but many can sill neither read nor write. Enter the SCRIVENER: a reader/writer for hire for anything from correspondence to legal papers. Bartleby The Scrivener Bartleby the Scrivener: A Story of Wall-Street Herman Melville's Bartleby, the most famous scrivener The rise of scholasticism in the 11th and 12th centuries ushered in the fall of transcription and wax tablets as authors began to write their own works down with pen & paper. (1853) Herman Mefeslie The Keyboard 1800s-2000s The QWERTY keyboard arrives in the form of the Sholes and Glidden Type Writer by Remington. 1873 The modern typewriter is born 1970s Other function By this time, all computers now have electronic keyboards keys now accompany the QWERTY format. 2000s All cellular phones SMS and text messaging become popular and widespread. now have keypads or QWERTY keyboards to support text and SMS messaging. 2010 Personal tablet computers such as iPad2 with the iPad also have a touch-screen keyboard QWERTY keyboard function. function. CAPTURING THE HUMAN VOICE This period saw an explosion of inventions aimed at capturing the human voice. Alexander Graham Bell & Thomas Edison both created dictation machines. In 1961, the IBM Shoebox moved us out of the age of manual input and into the age of computerized voice recognition. Graham Bell's Gramophone Edison's Phonograph The IBM Shoebox Natural Speech Today, programs exist for natural speech recognition and device control. iPhone 4S with Siri W R be sunny voice weekend in Miami Bring your sunglasses, 's recognition going to be nice in Mami 93 97 97 93 93 Dragon speech recognition software Tomorrow For thousands of years people have made progress - sometimes slow and sometimes swift - to make getting ideas from their heads as simple and effortless as possible: from the scribes of antiquity to the typewriter-toting scrivener to software like Dragon NaturallySpeaking.. WHAT'S NEXT? HOLA! IN 1893 HI! IN 1893_ TRANSLATION coupling recognition with translation to make speakers understood everywhere MULTIPLE VOICES INSTANT TRANSCRIPTION THOUGHT RECOGNITION Making the spoken word read- able in real time. Letting people share their words without even speaking recognition in a crowd SOURCES http://img2.imagesbn.com/images/92370000/92371141.JPG http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Graphophone1901.jpg http://www-03.ibm.com/ibm/history/exhibits/specialprod1/specialprodi_7.html http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Amazon_Kindle_3.JPG http://www.africaresource.com/rasta/sesostris-the-great-the-egyptian-hercules/septimius-severus-the-african-muurish-emperor-of-rome-the-greatest-emperor-of-ancient-rome/ http://www.mitchellteachers.org/WorldHistory/AncientEgyptNearEastUnit/IllustratedJournalsAncientEgyptDailyLife.html RED SE THE EVOLUTION CU L8RI OF INPUT See yal :) Since humans learned to write, they have sought new and better ways of doing it. From stone to clay, papyrus to wax, and paper to screens, people have tried a variety of approaches throughout history. The Ancients The Seribe An important profession in the ancient Near East Craftsmen, including a scribe, in the workshop of Pharaoh Amenhotep II. CHi cia Tars MEDITERRANEAN SEA Crete ezaca ineve Dolam Sesh Shofer dreesiur Dubsar Ecbatapa Tre Megiddd Dainasaus ISRAEL The role of the shofer persists today as these scribes produce the scrolls of the Torah. MESOPOTAMIA Gaz rusalem Babyton Typically a male from an elite A hereditary male role, these men were expected to master not only writing, but also arithmetic. Momenghis Pelusium Mphis * Dubsar * Sesh * Shofer household, his education would begin at the e-dubba. Thebes The Classical World The rise of literacy in Greece and Rome necessitated efficient book production methods. .UT.\BUNTUR PSl DD で 4TH CENTURY BCE トい 1 The Greeks introduce stenography, an abbreviated form of writing that is an important advancement in transcription. 3 & ROME large numbers of scribes, often Greek slaves listen to a single reader and transcribe the words into books to be sold by a publisher. Marcus Tullius Tiro, a freed Roman slave, develops the Tironian method, which is used for 1000+ years, and includes such modern symbols as the ampersand. Medieval Europe Early-Modern Times 1500-1800 AD 400-1400 AD Literacy becomes more common, but many can sill neither read nor write. Enter the SCRIVENER: a reader/writer for hire for anything from correspondence to legal papers. Bartleby The Scrivener Bartleby the Scrivener: A Story of Wall-Street Herman Melville's Bartleby, the most famous scrivener The rise of scholasticism in the 11th and 12th centuries ushered in the fall of transcription and wax tablets as authors began to write their own works down with pen & paper. (1853) Herman Mefeslie The Keyboard 1800s-2000s The QWERTY keyboard arrives in the form of the Sholes and Glidden Type Writer by Remington. 1873 The modern typewriter is born 1970s Other function By this time, all computers now have electronic keyboards keys now accompany the QWERTY format. 2000s All cellular phones SMS and text messaging become popular and widespread. now have keypads or QWERTY keyboards to support text and SMS messaging. 2010 Personal tablet computers such as iPad2 with the iPad also have a touch-screen keyboard QWERTY keyboard function. function. CAPTURING THE HUMAN VOICE This period saw an explosion of inventions aimed at capturing the human voice. Alexander Graham Bell & Thomas Edison both created dictation machines. In 1961, the IBM Shoebox moved us out of the age of manual input and into the age of computerized voice recognition. Graham Bell's Gramophone Edison's Phonograph The IBM Shoebox Natural Speech Today, programs exist for natural speech recognition and device control. iPhone 4S with Siri W R be sunny voice weekend in Miami Bring your sunglasses, 's recognition going to be nice in Mami 93 97 97 93 93 Dragon speech recognition software Tomorrow For thousands of years people have made progress - sometimes slow and sometimes swift - to make getting ideas from their heads as simple and effortless as possible: from the scribes of antiquity to the typewriter-toting scrivener to software like Dragon NaturallySpeaking.. WHAT'S NEXT? HOLA! IN 1893 HI! IN 1893_ TRANSLATION coupling recognition with translation to make speakers understood everywhere MULTIPLE VOICES INSTANT TRANSCRIPTION THOUGHT RECOGNITION Making the spoken word read- able in real time. Letting people share their words without even speaking recognition in a crowd SOURCES http://img2.imagesbn.com/images/92370000/92371141.JPG http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Graphophone1901.jpg http://www-03.ibm.com/ibm/history/exhibits/specialprod1/specialprodi_7.html http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Amazon_Kindle_3.JPG http://www.africaresource.com/rasta/sesostris-the-great-the-egyptian-hercules/septimius-severus-the-african-muurish-emperor-of-rome-the-greatest-emperor-of-ancient-rome/ http://www.mitchellteachers.org/WorldHistory/AncientEgyptNearEastUnit/IllustratedJournalsAncientEgyptDailyLife.html RED SE THE EVOLUTION CU L8RI OF INPUT See yal :) Since humans learned to write, they have sought new and better ways of doing it. From stone to clay, papyrus to wax, and paper to screens, people have tried a variety of approaches throughout history. The Ancients The Seribe An important profession in the ancient Near East Craftsmen, including a scribe, in the workshop of Pharaoh Amenhotep II. CHi cia Tars MEDITERRANEAN SEA Crete ezaca ineve Dolam Sesh Shofer dreesiur Dubsar Ecbatapa Tre Megiddd Dainasaus ISRAEL The role of the shofer persists today as these scribes produce the scrolls of the Torah. MESOPOTAMIA Gaz rusalem Babyton Typically a male from an elite A hereditary male role, these men were expected to master not only writing, but also arithmetic. Momenghis Pelusium Mphis * Dubsar * Sesh * Shofer household, his education would begin at the e-dubba. Thebes The Classical World The rise of literacy in Greece and Rome necessitated efficient book production methods. .UT.\BUNTUR PSl DD で 4TH CENTURY BCE トい 1 The Greeks introduce stenography, an abbreviated form of writing that is an important advancement in transcription. 3 & ROME large numbers of scribes, often Greek slaves listen to a single reader and transcribe the words into books to be sold by a publisher. Marcus Tullius Tiro, a freed Roman slave, develops the Tironian method, which is used for 1000+ years, and includes such modern symbols as the ampersand. Medieval Europe Early-Modern Times 1500-1800 AD 400-1400 AD Literacy becomes more common, but many can sill neither read nor write. Enter the SCRIVENER: a reader/writer for hire for anything from correspondence to legal papers. Bartleby The Scrivener Bartleby the Scrivener: A Story of Wall-Street Herman Melville's Bartleby, the most famous scrivener The rise of scholasticism in the 11th and 12th centuries ushered in the fall of transcription and wax tablets as authors began to write their own works down with pen & paper. (1853) Herman Mefeslie The Keyboard 1800s-2000s The QWERTY keyboard arrives in the form of the Sholes and Glidden Type Writer by Remington. 1873 The modern typewriter is born 1970s Other function By this time, all computers now have electronic keyboards keys now accompany the QWERTY format. 2000s All cellular phones SMS and text messaging become popular and widespread. now have keypads or QWERTY keyboards to support text and SMS messaging. 2010 Personal tablet computers such as iPad2 with the iPad also have a touch-screen keyboard QWERTY keyboard function. function. CAPTURING THE HUMAN VOICE This period saw an explosion of inventions aimed at capturing the human voice. Alexander Graham Bell & Thomas Edison both created dictation machines. In 1961, the IBM Shoebox moved us out of the age of manual input and into the age of computerized voice recognition. Graham Bell's Gramophone Edison's Phonograph The IBM Shoebox Natural Speech Today, programs exist for natural speech recognition and device control. iPhone 4S with Siri W R be sunny voice weekend in Miami Bring your sunglasses, 's recognition going to be nice in Mami 93 97 97 93 93 Dragon speech recognition software Tomorrow For thousands of years people have made progress - sometimes slow and sometimes swift - to make getting ideas from their heads as simple and effortless as possible: from the scribes of antiquity to the typewriter-toting scrivener to software like Dragon NaturallySpeaking.. WHAT'S NEXT? HOLA! IN 1893 HI! IN 1893_ TRANSLATION coupling recognition with translation to make speakers understood everywhere MULTIPLE VOICES INSTANT TRANSCRIPTION THOUGHT RECOGNITION Making the spoken word read- able in real time. Letting people share their words without even speaking recognition in a crowd SOURCES http://img2.imagesbn.com/images/92370000/92371141.JPG http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Graphophone1901.jpg http://www-03.ibm.com/ibm/history/exhibits/specialprod1/specialprodi_7.html http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Amazon_Kindle_3.JPG http://www.africaresource.com/rasta/sesostris-the-great-the-egyptian-hercules/septimius-severus-the-african-muurish-emperor-of-rome-the-greatest-emperor-of-ancient-rome/ http://www.mitchellteachers.org/WorldHistory/AncientEgyptNearEastUnit/IllustratedJournalsAncientEgyptDailyLife.html RED SE THE EVOLUTION CU L8RI OF INPUT See yal :) Since humans learned to write, they have sought new and better ways of doing it. From stone to clay, papyrus to wax, and paper to screens, people have tried a variety of approaches throughout history. The Ancients The Seribe An important profession in the ancient Near East Craftsmen, including a scribe, in the workshop of Pharaoh Amenhotep II. CHi cia Tars MEDITERRANEAN SEA Crete ezaca ineve Dolam Sesh Shofer dreesiur Dubsar Ecbatapa Tre Megiddd Dainasaus ISRAEL The role of the shofer persists today as these scribes produce the scrolls of the Torah. MESOPOTAMIA Gaz rusalem Babyton Typically a male from an elite A hereditary male role, these men were expected to master not only writing, but also arithmetic. Momenghis Pelusium Mphis * Dubsar * Sesh * Shofer household, his education would begin at the e-dubba. Thebes The Classical World The rise of literacy in Greece and Rome necessitated efficient book production methods. .UT.\BUNTUR PSl DD で 4TH CENTURY BCE トい 1 The Greeks introduce stenography, an abbreviated form of writing that is an important advancement in transcription. 3 & ROME large numbers of scribes, often Greek slaves listen to a single reader and transcribe the words into books to be sold by a publisher. Marcus Tullius Tiro, a freed Roman slave, develops the Tironian method, which is used for 1000+ years, and includes such modern symbols as the ampersand. Medieval Europe Early-Modern Times 1500-1800 AD 400-1400 AD Literacy becomes more common, but many can sill neither read nor write. Enter the SCRIVENER: a reader/writer for hire for anything from correspondence to legal papers. Bartleby The Scrivener Bartleby the Scrivener: A Story of Wall-Street Herman Melville's Bartleby, the most famous scrivener The rise of scholasticism in the 11th and 12th centuries ushered in the fall of transcription and wax tablets as authors began to write their own works down with pen & paper. (1853) Herman Mefeslie The Keyboard 1800s-2000s The QWERTY keyboard arrives in the form of the Sholes and Glidden Type Writer by Remington. 1873 The modern typewriter is born 1970s Other function By this time, all computers now have electronic keyboards keys now accompany the QWERTY format. 2000s All cellular phones SMS and text messaging become popular and widespread. now have keypads or QWERTY keyboards to support text and SMS messaging. 2010 Personal tablet computers such as iPad2 with the iPad also have a touch-screen keyboard QWERTY keyboard function. function. CAPTURING THE HUMAN VOICE This period saw an explosion of inventions aimed at capturing the human voice. Alexander Graham Bell & Thomas Edison both created dictation machines. In 1961, the IBM Shoebox moved us out of the age of manual input and into the age of computerized voice recognition. Graham Bell's Gramophone Edison's Phonograph The IBM Shoebox Natural Speech Today, programs exist for natural speech recognition and device control. iPhone 4S with Siri W R be sunny voice weekend in Miami Bring your sunglasses, 's recognition going to be nice in Mami 93 97 97 93 93 Dragon speech recognition software Tomorrow For thousands of years people have made progress - sometimes slow and sometimes swift - to make getting ideas from their heads as simple and effortless as possible: from the scribes of antiquity to the typewriter-toting scrivener to software like Dragon NaturallySpeaking.. WHAT'S NEXT? HOLA! IN 1893 HI! IN 1893_ TRANSLATION coupling recognition with translation to make speakers understood everywhere MULTIPLE VOICES INSTANT TRANSCRIPTION THOUGHT RECOGNITION Making the spoken word read- able in real time. Letting people share their words without even speaking recognition in a crowd SOURCES http://img2.imagesbn.com/images/92370000/92371141.JPG http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Graphophone1901.jpg http://www-03.ibm.com/ibm/history/exhibits/specialprod1/specialprodi_7.html http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Amazon_Kindle_3.JPG http://www.africaresource.com/rasta/sesostris-the-great-the-egyptian-hercules/septimius-severus-the-african-muurish-emperor-of-rome-the-greatest-emperor-of-ancient-rome/ http://www.mitchellteachers.org/WorldHistory/AncientEgyptNearEastUnit/IllustratedJournalsAncientEgyptDailyLife.html RED SE THE EVOLUTION CU L8RI OF INPUT See yal :) Since humans learned to write, they have sought new and better ways of doing it. From stone to clay, papyrus to wax, and paper to screens, people have tried a variety of approaches throughout history. The Ancients The Seribe An important profession in the ancient Near East Craftsmen, including a scribe, in the workshop of Pharaoh Amenhotep II. CHi cia Tars MEDITERRANEAN SEA Crete ezaca ineve Dolam Sesh Shofer dreesiur Dubsar Ecbatapa Tre Megiddd Dainasaus ISRAEL The role of the shofer persists today as these scribes produce the scrolls of the Torah. MESOPOTAMIA Gaz rusalem Babyton Typically a male from an elite A hereditary male role, these men were expected to master not only writing, but also arithmetic. Momenghis Pelusium Mphis * Dubsar * Sesh * Shofer household, his education would begin at the e-dubba. Thebes The Classical World The rise of literacy in Greece and Rome necessitated efficient book production methods. .UT.\BUNTUR PSl DD で 4TH CENTURY BCE トい 1 The Greeks introduce stenography, an abbreviated form of writing that is an important advancement in transcription. 3 & ROME large numbers of scribes, often Greek slaves listen to a single reader and transcribe the words into books to be sold by a publisher. Marcus Tullius Tiro, a freed Roman slave, develops the Tironian method, which is used for 1000+ years, and includes such modern symbols as the ampersand. Medieval Europe Early-Modern Times 1500-1800 AD 400-1400 AD Literacy becomes more common, but many can sill neither read nor write. Enter the SCRIVENER: a reader/writer for hire for anything from correspondence to legal papers. Bartleby The Scrivener Bartleby the Scrivener: A Story of Wall-Street Herman Melville's Bartleby, the most famous scrivener The rise of scholasticism in the 11th and 12th centuries ushered in the fall of transcription and wax tablets as authors began to write their own works down with pen & paper. (1853) Herman Mefeslie The Keyboard 1800s-2000s The QWERTY keyboard arrives in the form of the Sholes and Glidden Type Writer by Remington. 1873 The modern typewriter is born 1970s Other function By this time, all computers now have electronic keyboards keys now accompany the QWERTY format. 2000s All cellular phones SMS and text messaging become popular and widespread. now have keypads or QWERTY keyboards to support text and SMS messaging. 2010 Personal tablet computers such as iPad2 with the iPad also have a touch-screen keyboard QWERTY keyboard function. function. CAPTURING THE HUMAN VOICE This period saw an explosion of inventions aimed at capturing the human voice. Alexander Graham Bell & Thomas Edison both created dictation machines. In 1961, the IBM Shoebox moved us out of the age of manual input and into the age of computerized voice recognition. Graham Bell's Gramophone Edison's Phonograph The IBM Shoebox Natural Speech Today, programs exist for natural speech recognition and device control. iPhone 4S with Siri W R be sunny voice weekend in Miami Bring your sunglasses, 's recognition going to be nice in Mami 93 97 97 93 93 Dragon speech recognition software Tomorrow For thousands of years people have made progress - sometimes slow and sometimes swift - to make getting ideas from their heads as simple and effortless as possible: from the scribes of antiquity to the typewriter-toting scrivener to software like Dragon NaturallySpeaking.. WHAT'S NEXT? HOLA! IN 1893 HI! IN 1893_ TRANSLATION coupling recognition with translation to make speakers understood everywhere MULTIPLE VOICES INSTANT TRANSCRIPTION THOUGHT RECOGNITION Making the spoken word read- able in real time. Letting people share their words without even speaking recognition in a crowd SOURCES http://img2.imagesbn.com/images/92370000/92371141.JPG http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Graphophone1901.jpg http://www-03.ibm.com/ibm/history/exhibits/specialprod1/specialprodi_7.html http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Amazon_Kindle_3.JPG http://www.africaresource.com/rasta/sesostris-the-great-the-egyptian-hercules/septimius-severus-the-african-muurish-emperor-of-rome-the-greatest-emperor-of-ancient-rome/ http://www.mitchellteachers.org/WorldHistory/AncientEgyptNearEastUnit/IllustratedJournalsAncientEgyptDailyLife.html RED SE

The Evolution of Input

shared by Nuance on Feb 07
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From Scribes to Dragons, we’ve tried to find new and better ways to share our ideas. Here’s a graphical view of some of the major milestones through history.

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Nuance

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Nuance

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Technology
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