A Historical Study of Typewriters and Typing Methods: from the Position of Planning Japanese Parallels

抄録

The recent progress in electronics suggests that an efficient processing of Japanese text at a reasonable cost will be feasible in the near future. The only unsettled link in the processing step will be the input aspect. Manually operated keyboard will remain the only viable input method for the foreseeable future, and various keyboards together with different methods of computer aids are currently investigated or put into practice, although only a few of these are to survive the test of time just as what has happened in many other technical areas. The present note is a part of an attempt to shorten such time of trial, by critically examining what has happened in the history of Western typewriters, and by identifying the blind spots and pitfalls their contemporaries failed to recognize. It is our hope that such information at least will arm us with an ability to spot potential trouble areas which we should not overlook during our course of research and development. We attempted to point out the essential features needed for the typewriter's acceptance, what people did not know about typing method, consequently, what misjudgements people made on keyboard designs, and what they suffer from even today.

収録刊行物

Journal of information processing   [巻号一覧]

Journal of information processing 2(4), 175-202, 1980-02-29  [この号の目次]

一般社団法人情報処理学会

被引用文献:  2件

被引用文献を見るにはログインが必要です。ユーザIDをお持ちでない方は新規登録してください。

プレビュー

プレビュー

各種コード

  • NII論文ID(NAID) :
    110002673261
  • NII書誌ID(NCID) :
    AA00700121
  • 本文言語コード :
    ENG
  • 資料種別 :
    雑誌論文
  • ISSN :
    03876101
  • 収録DB :
    CJP引用  NII-ELS