supergee: (gargoyle)
[personal profile] supergee
I am about to join the 21st century (“dragged kicking and screaming” would be an exaggeration) by getting a smartphone. The part that bothers me is writing messages, as I am clumsy (“dick-fingered,” the Texans say) with hands that have always trembled and age has withered and/or custom staled. (The term I like is claudication, because it is an Anthony Burgess word; no Burgess novel is complete without claudication and apotropaic.) I am told one can get a phone with a stylus, which should help. Suggestions and advice gratefully accepted.

Date: 2019-04-02 09:53 am (UTC)
gingicat: deep purple lilacs, some buds, some open (Default)
From: [personal profile] gingicat
You might want to look into the Apple Pencil (an add-in for iOS drvices) if fine-motor movements are a big problem for you.

Edit: apparently only for tablets. :/
Edited Date: 2019-04-02 09:58 am (UTC)

Date: 2019-04-02 11:12 am (UTC)
cmcmck: (Default)
From: [personal profile] cmcmck
They say 'cack handed' here which, as a left hander, I strenuously object to!

Date: 2019-04-02 11:15 am (UTC)
melita66: (Default)
From: [personal profile] melita66
Drive-by...

You might find someone with an android phone that supports swipe. It will still come up with some wacky interpretations though.

Date: 2019-04-02 12:11 pm (UTC)
andrewducker: (Default)
From: [personal profile] andrewducker
The "Samsung Galaxy Note" comes with a stylus, and is large. I'd suggest that if you're comfortable with having a large screen then it may be easier for reading and writing than a smaller one.

(And you can get last year's model to make it cheaper)

Date: 2019-04-02 01:49 pm (UTC)
lydy: (Default)
From: [personal profile] lydy
If you get an android phone, if you can block-print at a reasonable speed, and if you don't mind learning a somewhat stylized version of block printing, I suggest the Graffiti Pro app. If you ever had a Palm (I had _so many_) they used Graffiti. I find it very intuitive, whereas trying to hunt and peck on a teeny-tiny keyboard drives me spare. (My index finger knows njuyh, and that's about it.) However, this is an unpopular choice, so I offer it with great tentativeness.

Now you, too, can know the secrets of the universe for the price of standing on a street corner making embarrassing noises with your underarms. :-)

Date: 2019-04-02 03:28 pm (UTC)
arlie: (Default)
From: [personal profile] arlie
Some phones have the ability to attach an external keyboard, along with surprisingly small keyboards. A very few have real keyboards. I'm currently using a Gemini, by Planet Computers but can't reccommend it whole heartedly - there have been too many bugs and compatability issues, notably including the phone panicking while I was on a call (several times), to the point where I pretty much demoted it to PDA and use a (free with my job) iPhone as my primary phone. But the physical design is IMNSHO wonderful... no "butt dialing", and the keyboard is arguably better than the ones built into some laptops.

Don't expect anything to be intuitive, and watch out for surprises, like various things known as gestures. It's very easy to have the experience of doing what appears to you to be the same thing 5 times in a row, and having at least 3 different results. When that happens, remember that it's not creeping senility, it's an incredibly dysfunctional user interface.

It's probably worth taking the how-to-use-the-blasted-thing courses from something like the Apple Store, if your choice comes with such. It feels bloody humiliating to need a class in how to use tech, but the UI designers seem to prefer "pretty" to functional and "undiscoverable" to "clear and easy to use". Expect to have to google how to do seemingly basic things. Expect to call people accidentally (even if you aren't literally butt-dialing).

Since your fingers tend towards trembling, you'll find yourself doubleclicking when you mean to click, etc. etc. In the current generation of iPhones, the same physical button either turns off the screen (helping to prevent butt-dialing) OR brings up Siri, depending on how long you press it. Some phones care about the amount of pressure you use when touching them, as well as (almost universally) how long you press/touch for. Some phones have various "accessibility" options, which *might* help work around some of these features. (I don't have trembling, so haven't investigated in detail.)


Edited Date: 2019-04-02 03:38 pm (UTC)

Date: 2019-04-02 07:18 pm (UTC)
sraun: portrait (Default)
From: [personal profile] sraun
Modern Styli come in two variations - rubber and conductive cloth mesh. I cannot stand the rubber ones - they catch on the surface for me. I adore the cloth mesh ones. My wife doesn't care, so she gets all the rubber ones that we end up being gifted with from time to time. Make certain to find and try each kind.

Date: 2019-04-03 05:08 am (UTC)
lavendertook: (Kitty laptop)
From: [personal profile] lavendertook
I have an iPhone, so that's all I know, but I think android phones work the same way, and if not maybe someone will correct me. Anyway, I find that if you hold the phone sideways, so the screen is horizontally longer, the keys are a little easier to press when they are wider. It's still too small for comfortably typing for me, but every little bit helps.

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Arthur D. Hlavaty

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