E3 Chap 02
E3 Chap 02
The Computer
The Computer
a computer system is made up of various elements
• variations
– desktop
– laptop
– PDA (Personal Digital Assistant)
sensors
and devices
everywhere
text entry devices
• Standardised layout
but …
– non-alphanumeric keys are placed differently
– accented symbols needed for different scripts
– minor differences between UK and USA keyboards
Alphabetic
– keys arranged in alphabetic order
– not faster for trained typists
– not faster for beginners either!
Dvorak
– common letters under dominant fingers
– biased towards right hand
– common combinations of letters alternate between hands
– 10-15% improvement in speed and reduction in fatigue
– But - large social base of QWERTY typists produce market
pressures not to change
special keyboards
--------------------------------------------
BUT - social resistance, plus fatigue after
extended use
NEW – niche market for some wearables
phone pad and T9 entry
• use numeric keys with
multiple presses
2 – a b c6
mno -
3 -def 7pqrs -
4 -ghi 8tuv -
5 -jkl 9wxyz -
hello = 4433555[pause]555666
surprisingly fast!
• T9 predictive entry
– type as if single key for each letter
– use dictionary to ‘guess’ the right word
– hello = 43556 …
– but 26 -> menu ‘am’ or ‘an’
Handwriting recognition
• Technical problems:
– capturing all useful information - stroke path,
pressure, etc. in a natural manner
– segmenting joined up writing into individual letters
– interpreting individual letters
– coping with different styles of handwriting
• Improving rapidly
• Most successful when:
– single user – initial training and learns peculiarities
– limited vocabulary systems
• Problems with
– external noise interfering
– imprecision of pronunciation
– large vocabularies
– different speakers
Numeric keypads
• Two characteristics
– planar movement
– buttons
(usually from 1 to 3 buttons on top, used for
making a selection, indicating an option, or to
initiate drawing etc.)
The Mouse (cont.)
Mouse located on desktop
– requires physical space
– no arm fatigue
• Mechanical
– Ball on underside of mouse turns as mouse is moved
– Rotates orthogonal potentiometers
– Can be used on almost any flat surface
• Optical
– light emitting diode on underside of mouse
– may use special grid-like pad or just on desk
– less susceptible to dust and dirt
– detects fluctuating alterations in reflected light intensity to
calculate relative motion in (x, z) plane
Even by foot …
Thumbwheels …
– for accurate CAD – two dials for X-Y
cursor position
– for fast scrolling – single dial on
mouse
Joystick and keyboard nipple
Joystick
– indirect
pressure of stick = velocity of
movement
– buttons for selection
on top or on front like a trigger
– often used for computer games
aircraft controls and 3D
navigation
• Advantages:
– fast, and requires no specialised pointer
– good for menu selection
– suitable for use in hostile environment: clean and safe from
damage.
• Disadvantages:
– finger can mark screen
– imprecise (finger is a fairly blunt instrument!)
• difficult to select small regions or perform accurate drawing
– lifting arm can be tiring
Stylus and light pen
Stylus
– small pen-like pointer to draw directly on screen
– may use touch sensitive surface or magnetic detection
– used in PDA, tablets PCs and drawing tables
Light Pen
– now rarely used
– uses light from screen to detect location
BOTH …
– very direct and obvious to use
– but can obscure screen
Digitizing tablet
• very accurate
- used for digitizing maps
Eyegaze
• The most accurate and accommodating
eye-driven communication device.
• control interface by eye gaze direction
– e.g. look at a menu item to select it
• uses laser beam reflected off retina
– … a very low power laser!
• mainly used for evaluation
• potential for hands-free control
• high accuracy requires headset
• cheaper and lower accuracy devices available
than it,
• sit under the screen like a small webcam
Cursor keys
Anti-aliasing
– softens edges by using shades of line colour
– also used for text
Cathode ray tube
• How it works …
– Top plate transparent and polarised, bottom plate reflecting.
– Light passes through top plate and crystal, and reflects back to
eye.
– Voltage applied to crystal changes polarisation and hence colour
– N.B. light reflected not emitted => less eye strain
special displays
handwritten
office owner
notes left
reads notes
using stylus
using web interface
Digital paper
appearance
• what?
– thin flexible sheets
– updated electronically cross
section
– but retain display
• how?
– small spheres turned
– or channels with coloured liquid
and contrasting spheres
– rapidly developing area
Virtual Reality and 3D Interaction
• Virtual reality (VR) systems and various forms of 3D
visualization require you to navigate and interact in a
three-dimensional space.
• Sometimes these use the ordinary controls and displays
of a desktop computer system, but there are also special
devices used both to move and interact with 3D objects
and to enable you to see a 3D environment.
Virtual Reality and 3D Interaction
(cont.)
• positioning in 3D space
• moving and grasping
yaw
roll
pitch
3D displays
• desktop VR
– ordinary screen, mouse or keyboard control
– perspective and motion give 3D effect
• seeing in 3D
– use stereoscopic vision
– VR helmets
– screen plus shuttered specs, etc.
• time delay
– move head … lag … display moves
– conflict: head movement vs. eyes
• depth perception
– headset gives different stereo distance
– but all focused in same plane
– conflict: eye angle vs. focus
• conflicting cues => sickness
– helps motivate improvements in technology
simulators and VR caves
• analogue representations:
– dials, gauges, lights, etc.
• digital displays:
– small LCD screens, LED lights, etc.
• head-up displays
– found in aircraft cockpits
– show most important controls …
depending on context
Sounds
easy-clean
smooth buttons
multi-function
control
large buttons
clear dials
tiny buttons
Why needed?
• We discussed the immediacy of haptic feedback and these
lessons are also important at the level of creating physical
devices; do keys, dials, etc., feel as if they have been
pressed or turned?
• Getting the right level of resistance can make the device
work naturally, give you feedback that you have done
something, or let you know that you are controlling
something.
• Where for some reason this is not possible, something has
to be done to prevent the user getting confused, perhaps
pressing buttons twice;
• For example, the smooth control panel of the microwave in
previous slide offers no tactile feedback, but beeps for each
keypress.
Environment and bio-sensing
print technology
fonts, page description, WYSIWYG
scanning, OCR
Printing
• shop tills
– dot matrix
– same print head used for several paper rolls
– may also print cheques
• thermal printers
– special heat-sensitive paper
– paper heated by pins makes a dot
– poor quality, but simple & low maintenance
– used in some fax machines
Fonts
• Font – the particular style of text
Courier font
Helvetica font
Palatino font
Times Roman font
• ♣×∝≡↵ℜ€⊗↵~€ (special symbol)
Pitch
– fixed-pitch – every character has the same width
e.g. Courier
– variable-pitched – some characters wider
e.g. Times Roman – compare the ‘i’ and the “m”
Serif or Sans-serif
– sans-serif – square-ended strokes
e.g. Helvetica
– serif – with splayed ends (such as)
e.g. Times Roman or Palatino
Readability of text
• lowercase
– easy to read shape of words
• UPPERCASE
– better for individual letters and non-words
e.g. flight numbers: BA793 vs. ba793
• serif fonts
– helps your eye on long lines of printed text
– but sans serif often better on screen
Page Description Languages
• WYSIWYG
– what you see is what you get
– aim of word processing, etc.
• but …
– screen: 72 dpi, landscape image
– print: 600+ dpi, portrait
• can try to make them similar
but never quite the same
• so … need different designs, graphics etc., for
screen and print
Scanners
• Take paper and convert it into a bitmap
Used in
– desktop publishing for incorporating
photographs and other images
• magnetic disks
– floppy disks store around 1.4 Mbytes
– hard disks typically 40 Gbytes to 100s of Gbytes
access time ~10ms, transfer rate 100kbytes/s (But
now it is in TB)
• optical disks
– use lasers to read and sometimes write
– more robust that magnetic media
– CD-ROM
- same technology as home audio, ~ 600 Gbytes
– DVD - for AV applications, or very large files
Blurring boundaries
• PDAs
– often use RAM for their main memory
• Flash-Memory
– used in PDAs, cameras etc.
– silicon based but persistent
– plug-in USB devices for data transfer
speed and capacity
• Problem:
– running lots of programs + each program large
– not enough RAM
• Images:
– many storage formats :
(PostScript, GIFF, JPEG, TIFF, PICT, etc.)
– plus different compression techniques
(to reduce their storage requirements)
• Audio/Video
– again lots of formats :
(QuickTime, MPEG, WAV, etc.)
– compression even more important
– also ‘streaming’ formats for network delivery
processing and networks
/e3/online/moores-law/
the myth of the infinitely
fast machine
Issues
– network delays – slow feedback
– conflicts - many people update data
– unpredictability
The internet
• history …
– 1969: DARPANET US DoD, 4 sites
– 1971: 23; 1984: 1000; 1989: 10000
• common language (protocols):
– TCP – Transmission Control protocol
• lower level, packets (like letters) between machines
– IP – Internet Protocol
• reliable channel (like phone call) between programs on
machines
– email, HTTP, all build on top of these