Gesture keyboard to help
Indian poor
Computer Active
April 13, 2006
Researchers in India have developed a gesture-based
keypad that can be used with minimal training to input many
of the country's languages – 22 of them 'official',
but many more that are spoken by smaller groups of people.
The problem is typified by Hindi, which
is spoken by 400 million people and requires 36 consonants
and 12 modifiers that can combine in 1,500 different ways,
some of which have short forms.
Hindi keyboards take far longer to learn
than their English equivalents, and with a growing amount
of official business being done via computers in local languages
non-typists can be at a distinct disadvantage.
The researchers at HP Labs India have overlaid
a soft keyboard showing the consonants onto a small Acecad
digitiser pad.
These can be combined with a number of
gestures to generate the Unicodes for the language's Devanagari
script; the Hindi version of Windows takes care of the short
forms.
The principle can be used with any phonetic
script. Shekhar Borgaonkar, director of the Bangalore lab's
affordable-access department, reckons that someone literate
in Hindi can use the system within 15 minutes.
The idea is one of several being developed
by HP to extend government help to people in the countryside
who may be at the mercy of middlemen and corrupt officials,
to say nothing of the notorious inertia of Indian bureaucracy.
A project called Coffei provides a framework
for the creation, deployment and administration of electronic
forms, using open standards such as InkML to extract data
from a keyboard or any pen-based device such as the gesture
pad or a Tablet PC.
Lab director Ajay Gupta demonstrated a
system by which farmers in remote villages could use a certified
form, downloaded in a cybercafé, to gain a bank loan.
The form provides a list of crops that
a farmer is growing, as certified by an official inspector;
the details are shown both in a readable form and an encrypted
barcode.
The bank can read both and the barcode
to check that information on the form has not been tampered
with.
The system incidentally stops officials
going slow on delivering certificates unless their palms
are oiled with a few rupees.
Gupta says the system could also be used
to certify qualifications certificates for people seeking
jobs and visas.
Another system developed at the labs uses
spare bandwidth in satellite TV systems to deliver educational
material in local languages that can be printed out and
used in class.
The same system can be used to deliver
public-service information to areas that otherwise might
not get it.
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