Apple says the iPad will lead the post-pc world, but the iPad still cannot compare to a PC in terms of speed of data entry. Daniel Hopper has built a keyboard prototype that he wants Apple to incorporate into the iPad. As you can see in the video, he has some serious suggestions about how typing could be much faster on the iPad.
If you like what you see in the video, Daniel has some instructions on how to tell Apple that you like his prototype:
1. Go to bugreport.apple.com, sign in and click "New Problem"
2. Set the Title to "Editing Text on iPad (duplicate of rdar://11365152)"
3. Set the Product to "iPad", Version Number to "N/A", Classification to "Feature (New)" and Is It Reproducible to "Not Applicable"
4. Copy the letter below and paste it in the Problem Details section then click submit
I just saw Daniel Hooper's iPad keyboard demo and I want that for my iPad! (Check out the video here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RGQTaHGQ04Q) Apple says the iPad is the future of the Post-PC world; if it's going to be my primary keyboard, I want a better way to edit text!
Tapping directly on text to move the cursor works well for small portions of text, but we don't just write short portions of text anymore! When performing lots of edits in larger documents the direct interaction metaphor falls apart for cursor control. Even short portions of text can be painful to edit when you need to move the cursor to a precise location. Would you ever want to write a document on your computer without using the arrow keys? This is the reality iPad users face because they do not have the equivalent of arrow keys. There is a better way.
Take advantage of gestures by making a drag over the keyboard UI move the cursor. Move the cursor in word increments when dragging with two fingers. And finally, let the user select text while dragging when they hold down shift.
Tapping directly on text to move the cursor works well for small portions of text, but we don't just write short portions of text anymore! When performing lots of edits in larger documents the direct interaction metaphor falls apart for cursor control. Even short portions of text can be painful to edit when you need to move the cursor to a precise location. Would you ever want to write a document on your computer without using the arrow keys? This is the reality iPad users face because they do not have the equivalent of arrow keys. There is a better way.
Take advantage of gestures by making a drag over the keyboard UI move the cursor. Move the cursor in word increments when dragging with two fingers. And finally, let the user select text while dragging when they hold down shift.