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PROTOCOL: ALT
COMPRESSION: NONE
CONNECT 2400/ARQ
CBBS(R) 4.0.3b
01/16/93 23:40:41
Y/N: want CBBS "1st time user" info?^U
?^U
?^U
?n;ward;christensen;odraw;;fullc;piss
Logging name to disk...
You are caller 228593; next msg =46030; 376 active msgs.
Prev. call 01/15/93 @ 21:51, next msg was 46028
Recording logon for next time.
Use FULL? to check assignments
?^U
?xxxxx
"Mine" command checking for msgs TO you, ^K to abort.
45605 04/18/92 ANDY SHAPIRO => WARD CHRISTENSEN: "R/COMPUADD EXPRESS"
dir log;dir killed;type-20 log,ward c;or;*;short
LOG. 9
KILLED. 21
01/14/93,09:01:10,228576,1,WARD CHRISTENSEN,,
RD CHRISTENSEN,,
E#46028,4
01/16/93,13:56:44,228590,2,ERIC BOHLMAN,,
E#46029,12
01/16/93,19:21:16,228591,2,BERNARD GOLDLUST,,1
01/16/93,21:27:44,228592,2,ROY PLUM,,2
01/16/93,23:40:46,228593,2,WARD CHRISTENSEN,,
46028 01/15/93 WARD CHRISTENSEN => ALL: "SPEECH INPUT?"
46029 01/16/93 ERIC BOHLMAN => WARD CHRISTENSEN: "R/SPEECH INPUT?"
- End of summary -
Retrieving flagged msgs: C skips, K aborts.
Msg 46028 is 02 line(s) on 01/15/93 from WARD CHRISTENSEN
to ALL re: SPEECH INPUT?
Well, carpal tunnel is getting to me - my left hand hurts, back of
hand "tingles". It is time for voice input! Do any of them really work?
Msg 46029 is 18 line(s) on 01/16/93 from ERIC BOHLMAN
to WARD CHRISTENSEN re: R/SPEECH INPUT?
Dragon Dictate really does work, although it has its quirks (when you're
getting started with it, it will often come up with truly weird guesses
as to what you're saying, though you always get a chance to correct
them). VoiceType from a company that you're probably quite familiar
with works pretty much the same (Dragon did the program design), but
has a smaller built-in vocabulary. All of these are discrete-word
recognizers; you have to pause between words. They're also memory
hogs.
A number of companies are now coming out with multiple-piece keyboards
where the pieces can be oriented to whatever angle keeps the stress
off your wrists.
Maybe I should write a TSR that measures the rate and number of keystrokes
and pops up a "give your wrists a break" message if you've been going
at it too long. Part of the problem is that your tendons swell up
more if you don't give them a chance to recover; if you take appropriate
pauses, you can get away with a lot more abuse.
dup. chars.
>Function:?