DREW: I actually have a Filco Majestouch keyboard, so if anyone wants to try it out, I've got it set up here. In fact... Shall we do a demo on the big screen? So you can see what it looks like? EMILE: Yeah, if you want, yeah. DREW: You won't be able to see what's happening, like, what keys I'm pressing, but you'll see how quickly text comes out. It's mental. Looks lovely, doesn't it? >> Do you take that to Starbucks? DREW: All right, let's see. All right. Also, I'm using TextEdit, because if you're in normal mode in Vim, with steno, it's just like... you know, if you put a beginner in front of Vim, random stuff happens. But you'll understand when you see this. Okay, so I'm just going to make this... Can I make this full screen or something? Or just make it big? Make it really big. Okay, so this is -- I'm running Plover, and this is one of those keyboards that does n-key rollover. So I'm just going to -- tell you what, I'll just mash the keys. So everything that comes out in uppercase is basically a chord that doesn't have a designated word. So, like, there are -- there's a Plover dictionary, and anything -- when I mash some keys, and random all-caps comes out, it means there's no word defined to that. So here, I'm going to start a new line. If I use both my index fingers, that's like using the return key. So... New line. And let's see. The... Um... (laughter) The cat. Oh, no, that's not cat. The sat. The cat sat. On? How do I do on? That's going to be... On. The... Mat, that would be M-A-T. >> It's so fast. (laughter) DREW: Yeah, it's incredible, isn't it? So that was... That was one stroke for each word. But each stroke involved, like, three or four keys being pressed at the same time but the way that, like, stenographers look on it, you might be pressing ten keys at once, but that's one stroke. As far as they're concerned. They can do maybe five strokes a second. Which sounds like nothing, if you're typing at 110 words per minute on qwerty. You're probably doing round about 10 keystrokes a second. But five strokes per second is actually quite slow, but text just comes out, like, really quickly. So... Let's see. Does anyone want to try this? I'm slightly... So basically, like, there's loads of single keys that will output a word. Like, all of the shortest, most common words, just come out with a single keystroke. So all of these words -- that's like one keystroke. >> So does every word have to have a chord, then? DREW: Yeah, every word has a chord. Huh? >> Single letters for (inaudible) Vim? DREW: Okay, so single letters. Right, the way it works -- you've got the left hand. It can spell the entire alphabet. And the right hand can spell only the parts of the alphabet that it needs to. And the thumbs deal with the vowels. And basically, you form a word by putting together a consonant, a vowel, and a consonant. And in the English language, English words aren't symmetrical. There are certain patterns that appear a lot at the end of a word, and there are certain patterns that appear a lot at the start of a word. And so the left hand has a completely different layout to the right hand, but both are capable of typing out most of the alphabet. But you can type all of the alphabet with the right hand. So if I hold down the asterisk key, I can spell the whole alphabet. I'll just demonstrate some of it. So I can go a, b, c. You know, this is pretty slow. But basically, you never have to do this. Oh, that's wrong. You never have to do this, because you've always got something -- you've always got a word. It's only if you have to add a new entry to the dictionary that you actually have to -- they call it fingerspelling. But yeah, so basically -- someone pick a one-syllable word, and I'll type it. >> Dog. DREW: What was that? Dog. Okay, so with my left hand, it would be -- this finger presses two keys at once, and then I use the O key with my left thumb, and then G. It sounds crazy. It really does sound crazy, doesn't it? Oh, I spelled the word dodge instead. It's funny, because everything turns out being phonetic, and whereas in qwerty, it's very easy to misspell a word, in steno, instead, what happens is a word comes out that sounds like the word you meant. It's really funny. So okay, I'll try again at dog. I think I did that wrong, actually. There we go, that's dog. It's pretty mental. >> It's like the T9 dictionary in old cell phones, isn't it? DREW: Like which dictionary? >> Predictive text. DREW: Yeah, I suppose it is, yeah. It's a bit like that. Yeah, but basically the way you would make it work with Vim -- you would have to define a custom dictionary with lots of chords representing the Vim commands. >> So emacs. DREW: It kind of becomes emacs, yeah. In fact, you could even create, like, an emacs dictionary, and a Vim dictionary, so that the same chords did the same thing in the different editors. You could create a steno Rosetta Stone-type situation. >> It's perfect for pairing stations, when people use Vim and emacs. >> Yeah, how about that? So if anyone wants to try that out, you're welcome to. It's pretty mental, just mashing the keys and seeing what comes out. I wasn't quite expecting so much random nonsense to come out there. But I'll just try that again. I'm going to press far fewer keys this time. So you can imagine -- if I actually knew what I was doing, I would compose text very, very quickly. >> So when is your next book out? DREW: Actually, there's a really good community around Plover, and there's a book being written right now. I learned about this stuff about a month ago, and there was maybe three chapters of the book, and now there's about seven chapters, and I'm dying for the next chapter to come out, because I'm stuck. But it's really good stuff. It's really worth trying out. So if anyone wants to try it out, you're welcome. Because it won't work with the built-in keyboard on your laptop, probably, which won't be n-key rollover. >> So next month we get the demonstration with Vim? DREW: I don't know. That's a lot to ask. Maybe, maybe. One of these days. I would love to get this working with Vim, but it's crazy talk now. So you can see why now if each one of these words is a single keystroke, if you were in normal mode, all sorts of crazy shit can happen. So like I say, I think random just doesn't even come close to describing a beginner steno operating Vim. >> Drew, how long have you been typing with steno? DREW: How long? >> Have you been typing with it? DREW: Oh, I heard about it a month ago. So occasionally I sit down and try and actually do some freeform writing, and it's quite funny. I don't know if I have an example here. No, I can't pull one out. But yeah. >> Would you second the claim that we heard, that in six months, you'll be typing 160 words a minute? DREW: I think you would have to be studying pretty hard to get there. I'm doing... So okay, comparing with, like, the learning curve for qwerty or Dvorak, or any of those sorts of things, with those, you learn the alphabet, and then you can type any word, just as long as you can spell that word. Right? But learning steno feels to me a lot more like learning a foreign language. In that you actually have to learn vocabulary. But that said, the basic rules, this idea of the left hand deals with the first part of the syllable, the right hand deals with the closing consonant, and the thumbs do the middle bit -- oh, and by the way, multi-syllabic words just end up being one stroke per syllable -- once you've kind of internalized those rules, and you can find the keys, it's amazing. It's amazing how much of the English language you can just guess, and often words -- if there are different ways that you can pronounce it, there are different chords that would produce the same word. So -- but then the thing is that all of the most commonly used words -- and again, this is a little bit like learning a language. You learn all of the rules of French grammar, and then you spend the rest of the time learning all the exceptions, and it kind of feels like that with Plover. It's like... Well, this book that I'm reading isn't finished yet. So I've learned all of the rules that have been written about so far. And there's gaps in my knowledge, and I'm looking forward to filling those gaps, but I've still got a lot of exceptions to learn, and of course I've still got to get my fingers actually finding the right words. So... >> And how good is it for writing code? DREW: Apparently it's brilliant. Shall I put up some videos of Mirabai Knight? She's, like, the creator of... >> If you type def in Python, then I'm thinking the English dictionary is going to write deaf, D-E-A-F, not def. So you type def... >> (inaudible) for C or Ruby or... (inaudible) DREW: Can you see that? You won't be able to hear it. That's too small, isn't it? You can just about see where it's... Okay, so this is nice, because they're actually showing the chords that are being typed. This is slowed down. So that's the chord for demonstration. One key for of, because it's such a common word. Plover is six keystrokes. Or six keys, but it's one stroke. This is massively slowed down. Look at this. It's like... Mirabai Knight, who's demonstrating here, she founded The Plover Project, and she can type at 240 words per minute. And that's what she does professionally. She does realtime transcription for, like, accessibility things. Pretty amazing. >> Are there fewer times when you're reaching with your little fingers around the keyboard? Because that's generally considered the emacs RSI thing. So is it just that your fingers are more compact? And you're just... Rather than just lots of stretching to shift, control... DREW: Yeah, I think one of the reasons emacs -- you know, they talk about emacs pinky. Most of the time, when you're doing a chord, on all modern software, you're holding down some combination of command, control, alt, shift, which are all operated with the pinkies. Maybe the thumbs. Combination of pinky and thumbs, and then maybe one finger pressing a letter, whereas this chordal input method puts equal weight on all the fingers. Yeah, it maybe even puts more weight on the stronger fingers. It's very ergonomically designed. There is an example of Mirabai typing Python code. So I'm just going to see if I can find that. And it's really fast. (inaudible) Sorry? (inaudible) This was the presentation that I first watched, which is worth checking out. Ah, where is it now? Let's try again. Plover... Python... Video. Let's try that. Ah, here we go. I can Google. Here we go. So that's realtime, basically. It's pretty much one stroke per idea. >> These are all regular words. DREW: So it's a really quick demo. >> How about snake case or camel case? DREW: There's a rule for that. So you know I was saying you can fingerspell. The left hand can do the whole alphabet, and then you hold down one modifier key, with the right hand, and you get letters. And if you hold down a different key, you get capital letters, and then there's a particular chord that says -- make the next word camel case. So start with an uppercase, and then don't insert a space afterwards. Oh, another thing about steno is you don't have to worry about spaces. It, like, automatically detects word boundaries, which is one area -- it's the kind of thing I'm stuck with, at the moment, because I often end up having words joined together, or not joined together, that shouldn't happen like that. Yeah. Can I show you one more thing? I think this is quite cool. When you're using something like this. So I'm going to type the word silent, which is two syllables. But the first syllable is sigh, and sigh is itself a word. So watch this. If I say -- forgive me, while I take a moment to compose this. So that was one stroke for sigh, and then if I do a stroke for lent, lent is also a word, but silent is a word. So I'm going to say... L-E-N-T. That should be good. See what happened there? It swallowed up the word sigh, and changed it, changed it into silent. So that is something you'll often see, if you watch somebody typing with steno. You see words appearing, and then being swallowed up, and sort of consumed by the subsequent characters. It's really cool when you see it happen. It sort of looks like an artifact, but then somehow I think it's kind of cool. >> What happens if you want to say sigh and lent in the same... DREW: Um, so you could force a space between them. I think if I just said... I think it's S-P will do a space. Generally a space will be inserted. But if I said... Sigh space... I've got to think about this... Lent, I can get the two words. But generally it's like -- you would look at when the individual syllables can form individual words, you would look at the English language, and think -- can I form a sentence where the word sigh is followed by the word lent? And if you can't think of a sentence that doesn't sound like nonsense, then it's safe to add that to the dictionary as a definition for the word silent. >> Is it the same for deletion? Does it delete word by word? DREW: Yeah, good question. So the asterisk key, the one in the middle, is like the backspace. It's kind of like undo in Vim, actually. So if I press it once, it deletes basically the last stroke. Press it again and again, and watch this. We get back to sigh. So that's -- you know, there's quite a lot of clever stuff going on inside of Plover, to track all of that stuff. So anyway, I've been talking long enough. Does anyone want to try this out? I'll put it down here, and you don't have to all do it on the big screen. But I've been so excited since I learned this. I sort of feel like there was a stage with Vim where I knew enough about what Vim was capable of, but didn't know how to operate it. And I sort of felt unsatisfied with the text editors I was using. I sort of feel like that about steno at the moment. It's like -- it's made me really unhappy with qwerty, but I can't use it yet. So it's something I'm working on.