Is there any software to introduce a lag on one side of the keyboard to compensate for one hand typing faster than the other and making mistakes?
Most people have a dominant hand. Mine is the right. So if I type
"from", I get "form" because the O comes form my faster right hand.
Although the signal from my brain comes at the same time, that side reacts faster.
Is there any software to introduce a lag on one side of the keyboard to compensate for one hand typing faster than the other and making mistakes?
Most people have a dominant hand. Mine is the right. So if I type "from", I get "form" because the O comes form my faster right hand. Although the signal from my brain comes at the same time, that side reacts faster.
Is there any software to introduce a lag on one side of the keyboard
to compensate for one hand typing faster than the other and making
mistakes?
Most people have a dominant hand. Mine is the right. So if I type
"from", I get "form" because the O comes form my faster right hand.
Although the signal from my brain comes at the same time, that side
reacts faster.
"Commander Kinsey" <CK1@nospam.com> wrote:
Is there any software to introduce a lag on one side of the keyboard to compensate for one hand typing faster than the other and making mistakes?
Most people have a dominant hand. Mine is the right. So if I type "from", I get "form" because the O comes form my faster right hand. Although the signal from my brain comes at the same time, that side reacts faster.
OK, dude, you not only have this weird issue to begin with, but you
want a software solution? Are you one of these morons who thinks
there's a pill for every problem, or some shit, I'll just install some amazing new software to help me type?
You're a retard.
Commander Kinsey <CK1@nospam.com> wrote:
Is there any software to introduce a lag on one side of the keyboard to
compensate for one hand typing faster than the other and making mistakes?
Most people have a dominant hand. Mine is the right. So if I type
"from", I get "form" because the O comes form my faster right hand.
Although the signal from my brain comes at the same time, that side reacts faster.
Not that I find with a quick search.
On 28/02/2023 06:40, Snit wrote:
Commander Kinsey <CK1@nospam.com> wrote:
Is there any software to introduce a lag on one side of the keyboard to
compensate for one hand typing faster than the other and making mistakes? >>>
Most people have a dominant hand. Mine is the right. So if I type
"from", I get "form" because the O comes form my faster right hand.
Although the signal from my brain comes at the same time, that side reacts >>> faster.
Not that I find with a quick search.
Perhaps you could advise him on how good speech to text is nowadays?
You are certainly very quick when using Messages. Fairly accurate too. :-)
On 28/02/2023 16:01, Snit wrote:
On Feb 28, 2023 at 8:58:56 AM MST, "David Brooks" wrote
<4xpLL.173649$rKDc.123137@fx34.iad>:
On 28/02/2023 06:40, Snit wrote:It is good... but hardly perfect. And you just did advise him. :)
Commander Kinsey <CK1@nospam.com> wrote:
Is there any software to introduce a lag on one side of the keyboard to >>>>> compensate for one hand typing faster than the other and making mistakes? >>>>>
Most people have a dominant hand. Mine is the right. So if I type
"from", I get "form" because the O comes form my faster right hand.
Although the signal from my brain comes at the same time, that side reacts
faster.
Not that I find with a quick search.
Perhaps you could advise him on how good speech to text is nowadays?
You are certainly very quick when using Messages. Fairly accurate too. :-) >>
It's good to know that you appreciate my subtlety! :-D
On Feb 28, 2023 at 8:58:56 AM MST, "David Brooks" wrote <4xpLL.173649$rKDc.123137@fx34.iad>:
On 28/02/2023 06:40, Snit wrote:
Commander Kinsey <CK1@nospam.com> wrote:
Is there any software to introduce a lag on one side of the keyboard to >>>> compensate for one hand typing faster than the other and making mistakes? >>>>
Most people have a dominant hand. Mine is the right. So if I type
"from", I get "form" because the O comes form my faster right hand.
Although the signal from my brain comes at the same time, that side reacts >>>> faster.
Not that I find with a quick search.
Perhaps you could advise him on how good speech to text is nowadays?
You are certainly very quick when using Messages. Fairly accurate too. :-)
It is good... but hardly perfect. And you just did advise him. :)
Commander Kinsey <CK1@nospam.com> wrote:
Is there any software to introduce a lag on one side of the keyboard to
compensate for one hand typing faster than the other and making mistakes?
Most people have a dominant hand. Mine is the right. So if I type
"from", I get "form" because the O comes form my faster right hand.
Although the signal from my brain comes at the same time, that side reacts faster.
Not that I find with a quick search.
On Tue, 28 Feb 2023 06:40:52 -0000, Snit <Brock.McNuggets@gmail.com> wrote:
Commander Kinsey <CK1@nospam.com> wrote:
Is there any software to introduce a lag on one side of the keyboard to
compensate for one hand typing faster than the other and making mistakes? >>>
Most people have a dominant hand. Mine is the right. So if I type
"from", I get "form" because the O comes form my faster right hand.
Although the signal from my brain comes at the same time, that side reacts >>> faster.
Not that I find with a quick search.
I guess if I welded two keyboards together, and got the computer to somehow delay typing from one of them.... Must be a circuit that could be placed in series on the USB cable.
Or I suppose a really clever circuit that looked at the keypress being sent and adjusted it accordingly. In fact it could then even spellcheck. Why don't computers do that? My phone corrects spelling without asking, if it's obvious.
My computer only underlines in red (if the particular program does so).
Commander Kinsey wrote on 2/28/2023 1:36 AM:
Is there any software to introduce a lag on one side of the keyboard
to compensate for one hand typing faster than the other and making
mistakes?
Most people have a dominant hand. Mine is the right. So if I type
"from", I get "form" because the O comes form my faster right hand.Although the signal from my brain comes at the same time, that side
reacts faster.
You are full of shit. You should find a software to learn to type properly.
Try these typing tutor software:
https://portableapps.com/apps/education/typefaster_portable
https://rapidtyping.com/downloads.html
On 2/28/23 01:48, this is what Joel wrote:
"Commander Kinsey" <CK1@nospam.com> wrote:I wouldn't say it that strongly, but I kind of agree. I flip letters around some times too, but I sort of think the
Is there any software to introduce a lag on one side of the keyboard to compensate for one hand typing faster than the other and making mistakes?
Most people have a dominant hand. Mine is the right. So if I type "from", I get "form" because the O comes form my faster right hand. Although the signal from my brain comes at the same time, that side reacts faster.
OK, dude, you not only have this weird issue to begin with, but you
want a software solution? Are you one of these morons who thinks
there's a pill for every problem, or some shit, I'll just install some
amazing new software to help me type?
You're a retard.
letters as I'm typing them and I try to type like piano teachers do with a metronome in my head. Slows down the speedy
hand. I used to hit 60wpm, granted now I'm down to 30 but the good part of touch typing is that you can watch the screen
and not the keyboard and catch the errors. Yes I know you catch them but hell, nobody's perfect.
All that aside, I don't think you'll ever find such a program.
Am 28.02.23 um 07:36 schrieb Commander Kinsey:
Is there any software to introduce a lag on one side of the keyboard to compensate for one hand typing faster than the other and making mistakes?
Most people have a dominant hand. Mine is the right. So if I type "from", I get "form" because the O comes form my faster right hand. Although the signal from my brain comes at the same time, that side reacts faster.
Stop this brain dead trolling.
Your Client is defect
and you are X-trolling over 5 groups.
User-Agent: Opera Mail/1.0 (Win32)
Lines: 3
Joerg Lorenz <hugybear@gmx.ch> wrote:
Am 28.02.23 um 07:36 schrieb Commander Kinsey:
Is there any software to introduce a lag on one side of the keyboard to
compensate for one hand typing faster than the other and making mistakes? >>>
Most people have a dominant hand. Mine is the right. So if I type
"from", I get "form" because the O comes form my faster right hand.
Although the signal from my brain comes at the same time, that side reacts faster.
Stop this brain dead trolling.
Your Client is defect and you are X-trolling over 5 groups.
User-Agent: Opera Mail/1.0 (Win32)
Lines: 3
I find that filtering out anything with alt.computer.workshop in the Newsgroups: header removes most of the unwanted x-posted articles.
Am 28.02.23 um 13:52 schrieb Alan B:
Joerg Lorenz <hugybear@gmx.ch> wrote:
Am 28.02.23 um 07:36 schrieb Commander Kinsey:
Is there any software to introduce a lag on one side of the keyboard to >>>> compensate for one hand typing faster than the other and making mistakes? >>>>
Most people have a dominant hand. Mine is the right. So if I type
"from", I get "form" because the O comes form my faster right hand.
Although the signal from my brain comes at the same time, that side reacts faster.
Stop this brain dead trolling.
Your Client is defect and you are X-trolling over 5 groups.
User-Agent: Opera Mail/1.0 (Win32)
Lines: 3
I find that filtering out anything with alt.computer.workshop in the
Newsgroups: header removes most of the unwanted x-posted articles.
Much easier:
If Newsgroups contains "." then ignore subthread
you get all X-posts if you want.
Joerg Lorenz <hugybear@gmx.ch> wrote:
Am 28.02.23 um 13:52 schrieb Alan B:
Joerg Lorenz <hugybear@gmx.ch> wrote:
Am 28.02.23 um 07:36 schrieb Commander Kinsey:
Is there any software to introduce a lag on one side of the keyboard to >>>>> compensate for one hand typing faster than the other and making mistakes? >>>>>
Most people have a dominant hand. Mine is the right. So if I type
"from", I get "form" because the O comes form my faster right hand.
Although the signal from my brain comes at the same time, that side reacts faster.
Stop this brain dead trolling.
Your Client is defect and you are X-trolling over 5 groups.
User-Agent: Opera Mail/1.0 (Win32)
Lines: 3
I find that filtering out anything with alt.computer.workshop in the
Newsgroups: header removes most of the unwanted x-posted articles.
Much easier:
If Newsgroups contains "." then ignore subthread
you get all X-posts if you want.
Yes I realise that. I may do that if the situation worsens.
On Tue, 28 Feb 2023 13:04:17 -0000, Big Al <Bears@invalid.com> wrote:
On 2/28/23 01:48, this is what Joel wrote:
"Commander Kinsey" <CK1@nospam.com> wrote:I wouldn't say it that strongly, but I kind of agree. I flip letters
Is there any software to introduce a lag on one side of the keyboard
to compensate for one hand typing faster than the other and making mistakes?
Most people have a dominant hand. Mine is the right. So if I type
"from", I get "form" because the O comes form my faster right hand.
Although the signal from my brain comes at the same time, that side reacts faster.
OK, dude, you not only have this weird issue to begin with, but you
want a software solution? Are you one of these morons who thinks
there's a pill for every problem, or some shit, I'll just install some
amazing new software to help me type?
You're a retard.
around some times too, but I sort of think the
letters as I'm typing them and I try to type like piano teachers do with
a metronome in my head. Slows down the speedy
hand. I used to hit 60wpm, granted now I'm down to 30 but the good part
of touch typing is that you can watch the screen
and not the keyboard and catch the errors. Yes I know you catch them
but hell, nobody's perfect.
All that aside, I don't think you'll ever find such a program.
So many people type form instead of from, someone must have made one.
People also type form when they mean to, how would the lag software work in that case? You're just inventing a (very bad) mechanical spell checker.
On Tue, 28 Feb 2023 09:21:22 -0000, Joerg Lorenz <hugybear@gmx.ch> wrote:
and you are X-trolling over 5 groups.
If we weren't meant to crosspost, the function wouldn't exist.
User-Agent: Opera Mail/1.0 (Win32)
Lines: 3
Why are you interested in my newsreader and how many lines I've posted?
On Tue, 28 Feb 2023 14:29:23 -0000, Alan B <alanrichardbarker@gmail.com.invalid> wrote:
Yes I realise that. I may do that if the situation worsens.
Are you incapable of killfiling one person? It isn't rocket science.
On Tue, 28 Feb 2023 14:19:56 -0000, Joerg Lorenz <hugybear@gmx.ch> wrote:
Much easier:
If Newsgroups contains "." then ignore subthread
That would filter every single post by everyone you nitwit.
Am 07.03.23 um 07:03 schrieb Commander Kinsey:
On Tue, 28 Feb 2023 14:19:56 -0000, Joerg Lorenz <hugybear@gmx.ch> wrote: >>> Much easier:
If Newsgroups contains "." then ignore subthread
That would filter every single post by everyone you nitwit.
That shows how brain dead you are.
Newsgroups: uk.comp.sys.mac,alt.computer.workshop,alt.comp.os.windows-10 ^^^^^^^^^^
appears only in the header if more than two NGs are addressed.
Filtering is beyond your capabilities. Far beyond.
Am 07.03.23 um 07:02 schrieb Commander Kinsey:
On Tue, 28 Feb 2023 09:21:22 -0000, Joerg Lorenz <hugybear@gmx.ch> wrote:
and you are X-trolling over 5 groups.
If we weren't meant to crosspost, the function wouldn't exist.
User-Agent: Opera Mail/1.0 (Win32)
Lines: 3
Why are you interested in my newsreader and how many lines I've posted?
Because you deliberately neglect the netiquette?
On Tue, 7 Mar 2023 18:46:50 +0100, Joerg Lorenz wrote:
Am 07.03.23 um 07:02 schrieb Commander Kinsey:
On Tue, 28 Feb 2023 09:21:22 -0000, Joerg Lorenz <hugybear@gmx.ch> wrote: >>>> and you are X-trolling over 5 groups.
If we weren't meant to crosspost, the function wouldn't exist.
User-Agent: Opera Mail/1.0 (Win32)
Lines: 3
Why are you interested in my newsreader and how many lines I've posted?
Because you deliberately neglect the netiquette?
And every time you post a follow-up, _all_ you accomplish is
encouraging him/her/it to continue.
It amazes me that, almost 40 years into Usenet, otherwise intelligent
people still seem to feel that there's some benefit to appealing to
reason when dealing with trolls.
On Feb 28, 2023 at 3:02:38 PM MST, ""Commander Kinsey"" wrote <op.103jio1omvhs6z@ryzen.home>:
On Tue, 28 Feb 2023 06:40:52 -0000, Snit <Brock.McNuggets@gmail.com> wrote: >>
Commander Kinsey <CK1@nospam.com> wrote:
Is there any software to introduce a lag on one side of the keyboard to >>>> compensate for one hand typing faster than the other and making mistakes? >>>>
Most people have a dominant hand. Mine is the right. So if I type
"from", I get "form" because the O comes form my faster right hand.
Although the signal from my brain comes at the same time, that side reacts >>>> faster.
Not that I find with a quick search.
I guess if I welded two keyboards together, and got the computer to somehow >> delay typing from one of them.... Must be a circuit that could be placed in >> series on the USB cable.
I know macOS has a setting where you have to hold a key down for X time before
it registers. Windows might.
Or I suppose a really clever circuit that looked at the keypress being sent >> and adjusted it accordingly. In fact it could then even spellcheck. Why don't
computers do that? My phone corrects spelling without asking, if it's obvious.
My computer only underlines in red (if the particular program does so).
macOS has it, and I have it on. Explains some of my typos.
On Tue, 28 Feb 2023 22:39:09 -0000, Snit <brock.mcnuggets@gmail.com> wrote:
On Feb 28, 2023 at 3:02:38 PM MST, ""Commander Kinsey"" wrote
<op.103jio1omvhs6z@ryzen.home>:
On Tue, 28 Feb 2023 06:40:52 -0000, Snit <Brock.McNuggets@gmail.com> wrote: >>>
Commander Kinsey <CK1@nospam.com> wrote:
Is there any software to introduce a lag on one side of the keyboard to >>>>> compensate for one hand typing faster than the other and making mistakes? >>>>>
Most people have a dominant hand. Mine is the right. So if I type
"from", I get "form" because the O comes form my faster right hand.
Although the signal from my brain comes at the same time, that side reacts
faster.
Not that I find with a quick search.
I guess if I welded two keyboards together, and got the computer to somehow >>> delay typing from one of them.... Must be a circuit that could be placed in >>> series on the USB cable.
I know macOS has a setting where you have to hold a key down for X time before
it registers. Windows might.
Sounds like one of those weird accessibility thins. I doubt it would delay some keys more than others.
Or I suppose a really clever circuit that looked at the keypress being sent
and adjusted it accordingly. In fact it could then even spellcheck. Why don't
computers do that? My phone corrects spelling without asking, if it's obvious.
My computer only underlines in red (if the particular program does so).
macOS has it, and I have it on. Explains some of my typos.
Globally? Spellchecks in Windows are per app.
Ah yes, MacOS is communist, I forgot.
Most people have a dominant hand. Mine is the right. So
if I type "from", I get "form" because the O comes form my
faster right hand. Although the signal from my brain
comes at the same time, that side reacts faster.
The from/form typo occurs not because of the dominant hand,
but because the hands function in parallel, whereas the
finger on each hand -- more or less in sequence. I therefor
frequently make both typos: from->form (RL), list->lsit
(LR).
On Tue, 7 Mar 2023 08:26:53 -0000 (UTC), Chris wrote:
People also type form when they mean to, how would the lag software work in >> that case? You're just inventing a (very bad) mechanical spell checker.
However tempting it may be, please don't feed the trolls.
Am 07.03.23 um 07:02 schrieb Commander Kinsey:
On Tue, 28 Feb 2023 09:21:22 -0000, Joerg Lorenz <hugybear@gmx.ch> wrote: >>> and you are X-trolling over 5 groups.
If we weren't meant to crosspost, the function wouldn't exist.
User-Agent: Opera Mail/1.0 (Win32)
Lines: 3
Why are you interested in my newsreader and how many lines I've posted?
Because you deliberately neglect the netiquette?
On Tue, 7 Mar 2023 18:46:50 +0100, Joerg Lorenz wrote:
Am 07.03.23 um 07:02 schrieb Commander Kinsey:
On Tue, 28 Feb 2023 09:21:22 -0000, Joerg Lorenz <hugybear@gmx.ch> wrote: >> >> and you are X-trolling over 5 groups.
If we weren't meant to crosspost, the function wouldn't exist.
User-Agent: Opera Mail/1.0 (Win32)
Lines: 3
Why are you interested in my newsreader and how many lines I've posted?
Because you deliberately neglect the netiquette?
And every time you post a follow-up, _all_ you accomplish is
encouraging him/her/it to continue.
It amazes me that, almost 40 years into Usenet, otherwise intelligent
people still seem to feel that there's some benefit to appealing to
reason when dealing with trolls.
Am 07.03.23 um 07:03 schrieb Commander Kinsey:
On Tue, 28 Feb 2023 14:19:56 -0000, Joerg Lorenz <hugybear@gmx.ch> wrote: >>> Much easier:
If Newsgroups contains "." then ignore subthread
That would filter every single post by everyone you nitwit.
That shows how brain dead you are.
Newsgroups: uk.comp.sys.mac,alt.computer.workshop,alt.comp.os.windows-10 ^^^^^^^^^^
appears only in the header if more than two NGs are addressed.
Filtering is beyond your capabilities. Far beyond.
On Tue, 07 Mar 2023 17:46:50 -0000, Joerg Lorenz <hugybear@gmx.ch> wrote:
Because you deliberately neglect the netiquette?
Netiquette? What are you a girl? There are no laws in here.
Am 12.03.23 um 21:47 schrieb Commander Kinsey:
On Tue, 28 Feb 2023 22:39:09 -0000, Snit <brock.mcnuggets@gmail.com> wrote: >>> macOS has it, and I have it on. Explains some of my typos.
Globally? Spellchecks in Windows are per app.
Ah yes, MacOS is communist, I forgot.
And you the group-idiot. You remind us every day.
X-posting reduced to the relevant groups.
I know macOS has a setting where you have to hold a key down for X time before
it registers. Windows might.
Sounds like one of those weird accessibility thins. I doubt it would delay >>> some keys more than others.
Right on both accounts.
I've come to the conclusion sometimes my left hand is faster and sometimes my right. Not sure why, but it means I can't get software to compensate.
Or I suppose a really clever circuit that looked at the keypress being sentmacOS has it, and I have it on. Explains some of my typos.
and adjusted it accordingly. In fact it could then even spellcheck. Why don't
computers do that? My phone corrects spelling without asking, if it's obvious.
My computer only underlines in red (if the particular program does so). >>>>
Globally? Spellchecks in Windows are per app.
There is a global one for macOS. Some apps ignore it.
Let Russia win, then we could have standards.
Ah yes, MacOS is communist, I forgot.
The word you are looking for: consistent.
Same thing.
On Mar 12, 2023 at 1:47:59 PM MST, ""Commander Kinsey"" wrote <op.11pn19wrmvhs6z@ryzen.home>:
On Tue, 28 Feb 2023 22:39:09 -0000, Snit <brock.mcnuggets@gmail.com> wrote: >>
On Feb 28, 2023 at 3:02:38 PM MST, ""Commander Kinsey"" wrote
<op.103jio1omvhs6z@ryzen.home>:
On Tue, 28 Feb 2023 06:40:52 -0000, Snit <Brock.McNuggets@gmail.com> wrote:
Commander Kinsey <CK1@nospam.com> wrote:
Is there any software to introduce a lag on one side of the keyboard to >>>>>> compensate for one hand typing faster than the other and making mistakes?
Most people have a dominant hand. Mine is the right. So if I type >>>>>> "from", I get "form" because the O comes form my faster right hand. >>>>>> Although the signal from my brain comes at the same time, that side reacts
faster.
Not that I find with a quick search.
I guess if I welded two keyboards together, and got the computer to somehow
delay typing from one of them.... Must be a circuit that could be placed in
series on the USB cable.
I know macOS has a setting where you have to hold a key down for X time before
it registers. Windows might.
Sounds like one of those weird accessibility thins. I doubt it would delay >> some keys more than others.
Right on both accounts.
Or I suppose a really clever circuit that looked at the keypress being sentmacOS has it, and I have it on. Explains some of my typos.
and adjusted it accordingly. In fact it could then even spellcheck. Why don't
computers do that? My phone corrects spelling without asking, if it's obvious.
My computer only underlines in red (if the particular program does so). >>>
Globally? Spellchecks in Windows are per app.
There is a global one for macOS. Some apps ignore it.
Ah yes, MacOS is communist, I forgot.
The word you are looking for: consistent.
Commander Kinsey:
Most people have a dominant hand. Mine is the right. So
if I type "from", I get "form" because the O comes form my
faster right hand. Although the signal from my brain
comes at the same time, that side reacts faster.
The from/form typo occurs not because of the dominant hand,
but because the hands function in parallel, whereas the
finger on each hand -- more or less in sequence. I therefor
frequently make both typos: from->form (RL), list->lsit
(LR).
On 3/14/23 09:47, Anton Shepelev wrote:
[snip]
The from/form typo occurs not because of the dominant hand,
but because the hands function in parallel, whereas the
finger on each hand -- more or less in sequence. I therefor
frequently make both typos: from->form (RL), list->lsit
(LR).
The typo I used to make frequently was typing list as lust.
On Mar 19, 2023 at 2:17:26 PM MST, ""Commander Kinsey"" wrote <op.112n3ce8mvhs6z@ryzen.home>:
...
I know macOS has a setting where you have to hold a key down for X time before
it registers. Windows might.
Sounds like one of those weird accessibility thins. I doubt it would delay >>>> some keys more than others.
Right on both accounts.
I've come to the conclusion sometimes my left hand is faster and sometimes my
right. Not sure why, but it means I can't get software to compensate.
Likely tied to muscle memory and what word you are typing.
Or what you are doing with your hands.
Or I suppose a really clever circuit that looked at the keypress being sentmacOS has it, and I have it on. Explains some of my typos.
and adjusted it accordingly. In fact it could then even spellcheck. Why don't
computers do that? My phone corrects spelling without asking, if it's obvious.
My computer only underlines in red (if the particular program does so). >>>>>
Globally? Spellchecks in Windows are per app.
There is a global one for macOS. Some apps ignore it.
Let Russia win, then we could have standards.
I like more how, say, Photoshop deals with a color picker. It has its own, BUT
you can also use the system one. That gives you the best of both worlds.
Ah yes, MacOS is communist, I forgot.
The word you are looking for: consistent.
Same thing.
You always say that.
Hmmmm...
Am 19.03.23 um 13:11 schrieb Commander Kinsey:
On Tue, 07 Mar 2023 17:46:50 -0000, Joerg Lorenz <hugybear@gmx.ch> wrote: >>> Because you deliberately neglect the netiquette?
Netiquette? What are you a girl? There are no laws in here.
You are the decoration of my kill-file.
This is the law, dear.
Did you ever consider to visit a psychiatrist?
On Sun, 19 Mar 2023 21:21:46 -0000, Snit <brock.mcnuggets@gmail.com> wrote:
On Mar 19, 2023 at 2:17:26 PM MST, ""Commander Kinsey"" wrote
<op.112n3ce8mvhs6z@ryzen.home>:
...
I know macOS has a setting where you have to hold a key down for X time before
it registers. Windows might.
Sounds like one of those weird accessibility thins. I doubt it would delay
some keys more than others.
Right on both accounts.
I've come to the conclusion sometimes my left hand is faster and sometimes my
right. Not sure why, but it means I can't get software to compensate.
Likely tied to muscle memory and what word you are typing.
So my stupid muscles (like the memory is actually in there) remember typing form and type form instead of from? But I type from much more often. Or is the
sequence OR more common than RO?
Or what you are doing with your hands.
Typing.
Or I suppose a really clever circuit that looked at the keypress being sent
and adjusted it accordingly. In fact it could then even spellcheck. Why don't
computers do that? My phone corrects spelling without asking, if it's obvious.
My computer only underlines in red (if the particular program does so).
macOS has it, and I have it on. Explains some of my typos.
Globally? Spellchecks in Windows are per app.
There is a global one for macOS. Some apps ignore it.
Let Russia win, then we could have standards.
I like more how, say, Photoshop deals with a color picker. It has its own, BUT
you can also use the system one. That gives you the best of both worlds.
Agreed. Although I'd never use Photoshop, too complicated and slow.
Ah yes, MacOS is communist, I forgot.
The word you are looking for: consistent.
Same thing.
You always say that.
Hmmmm...
One of the things with communism, the government controls stuff so there are standards. All tanks have the same size bolts.
On Mar 30, 2023 at 3:07:06 AM MST, ""Commander Kinsey"" wrote <op.12l6d4bgmvhs6z@ryzen.home>:
On Sun, 19 Mar 2023 21:21:46 -0000, Snit <brock.mcnuggets@gmail.com> wrote: >>
On Mar 19, 2023 at 2:17:26 PM MST, ""Commander Kinsey"" wrote
<op.112n3ce8mvhs6z@ryzen.home>:
...
I know macOS has a setting where you have to hold a key down for X time before
it registers. Windows might.
Sounds like one of those weird accessibility thins. I doubt it would delay
some keys more than others.
Right on both accounts.
I've come to the conclusion sometimes my left hand is faster and sometimes my
right. Not sure why, but it means I can't get software to compensate.
Likely tied to muscle memory and what word you are typing.
So my stupid muscles (like the memory is actually in there) remember typing >> form and type form instead of from? But I type from much more often. Or is the
sequence OR more common than RO?
Really don't know, but I would go with the OR over RO.
Or what you are doing with your hands.
Typing.
I meant in terms of where they are and where the keyboard is. Maybe not consistent?
Or I suppose a really clever circuit that looked at the keypress being sent
and adjusted it accordingly. In fact it could then even spellcheck. Why don't
computers do that? My phone corrects spelling without asking, if it's obvious.
My computer only underlines in red (if the particular program does so).
macOS has it, and I have it on. Explains some of my typos.
Globally? Spellchecks in Windows are per app.
There is a global one for macOS. Some apps ignore it.
Let Russia win, then we could have standards.
I like more how, say, Photoshop deals with a color picker. It has its own, BUT
you can also use the system one. That gives you the best of both worlds.
Agreed. Although I'd never use Photoshop, too complicated and slow.
It is complex... but it does a LOT. I am out of practice with it, though.
On Thu, 30 Mar 2023 15:11:14 +0100, Snit <brock.mcnuggets@gmail.com> wrote:
On Mar 30, 2023 at 3:07:06 AM MST, ""Commander Kinsey"" wrote
<op.12l6d4bgmvhs6z@ryzen.home>:
On Sun, 19 Mar 2023 21:21:46 -0000, Snit <brock.mcnuggets@gmail.com> wrote: >>>
On Mar 19, 2023 at 2:17:26 PM MST, ""Commander Kinsey"" wrote
<op.112n3ce8mvhs6z@ryzen.home>:
...
Likely tied to muscle memory and what word you are typing.
I know macOS has a setting where you have to hold a key down for X time before
it registers. Windows might.
Sounds like one of those weird accessibility thins. I doubt it would delay
some keys more than others.
Right on both accounts.
I've come to the conclusion sometimes my left hand is faster and sometimes my
right. Not sure why, but it means I can't get software to compensate. >>>>
So my stupid muscles (like the memory is actually in there) remember typing >>> form and type form instead of from? But I type from much more often. Or is the
sequence OR more common than RO?
Really don't know, but I would go with the OR over RO.
There's probably a webpage which can tell us.
Or what you are doing with your hands.
Typing.
I meant in terms of where they are and where the keyboard is. Maybe not
consistent?
Possible. That reminds me of a professor, I was fixing his computer, sat in front of it, and asked him to type his password. He said he needed to sit in front of the computer. I assumed he didn't want me seeing the password and said "I'm looking away". He became quite agitated and insisted he couldn't type at all without being in front of the keyboard. If he was blind I could understand it.
Agreed. Although I'd never use Photoshop, too complicated and slow.Or I suppose a really clever circuit that looked at the keypress being sent
and adjusted it accordingly. In fact it could then even spellcheck. Why don't
computers do that? My phone corrects spelling without asking, if it's obvious.
My computer only underlines in red (if the particular program does so).
macOS has it, and I have it on. Explains some of my typos.
Globally? Spellchecks in Windows are per app.
There is a global one for macOS. Some apps ignore it.
Let Russia win, then we could have standards.
I like more how, say, Photoshop deals with a color picker. It has its own, BUT
you can also use the system one. That gives you the best of both worlds. >>>
It is complex... but it does a LOT. I am out of practice with it, though.
The layers piss me off.
On Apr 23, 2023 at 2:10:03 AM MST, ""Commander Kinsey"" wrote <op.13ujq1mbmvhs6z@ryzen.home>:
On Thu, 30 Mar 2023 15:11:14 +0100, Snit <brock.mcnuggets@gmail.com> wrote: >>
On Mar 30, 2023 at 3:07:06 AM MST, ""Commander Kinsey"" wrote
<op.12l6d4bgmvhs6z@ryzen.home>:
On Sun, 19 Mar 2023 21:21:46 -0000, Snit <brock.mcnuggets@gmail.com> wrote:
On Mar 19, 2023 at 2:17:26 PM MST, ""Commander Kinsey"" wrote
<op.112n3ce8mvhs6z@ryzen.home>:
...
Likely tied to muscle memory and what word you are typing.
I know macOS has a setting where you have to hold a key down for X time before
it registers. Windows might.
Sounds like one of those weird accessibility thins. I doubt it would delay
some keys more than others.
Right on both accounts.
I've come to the conclusion sometimes my left hand is faster and sometimes my
right. Not sure why, but it means I can't get software to compensate. >>>>>
So my stupid muscles (like the memory is actually in there) remember typing
form and type form instead of from? But I type from much more often. Or is the
sequence OR more common than RO?
Really don't know, but I would go with the OR over RO.
There's probably a webpage which can tell us.
Did a brief search and struck out.
Or what you are doing with your hands.
Typing.
I meant in terms of where they are and where the keyboard is. Maybe not
consistent?
Possible. That reminds me of a professor, I was fixing his computer, sat in >> front of it, and asked him to type his password. He said he needed to sit in >> front of the computer. I assumed he didn't want me seeing the password and >> said "I'm looking away". He became quite agitated and insisted he couldn't >> type at all without being in front of the keyboard. If he was blind I could >> understand it.
He relied on muscle memory.
The layers piss me off.Agreed. Although I'd never use Photoshop, too complicated and slow.Or I suppose a really clever circuit that looked at the keypress being sent
and adjusted it accordingly. In fact it could then even spellcheck. Why don't
computers do that? My phone corrects spelling without asking, if it's obvious.
My computer only underlines in red (if the particular program does so).
macOS has it, and I have it on. Explains some of my typos.
Globally? Spellchecks in Windows are per app.
There is a global one for macOS. Some apps ignore it.
Let Russia win, then we could have standards.
I like more how, say, Photoshop deals with a color picker. It has its own, BUT
you can also use the system one. That gives you the best of both worlds. >>>>
It is complex... but it does a LOT. I am out of practice with it, though. >>
I like them. And layer groups and smart layers and masking layers.
Or what you are doing with your hands.
Typing.
I meant in terms of where they are and where the keyboard is. Maybe not >>>> consistent?
Possible. That reminds me of a professor, I was fixing his computer, sat in >>> front of it, and asked him to type his password. He said he needed to sit in
front of the computer. I assumed he didn't want me seeing the password and >>> said "I'm looking away". He became quite agitated and insisted he couldn't >>> type at all without being in front of the keyboard. If he was blind I could >>> understand it.
He relied on muscle memory.
I doubt that's accurate enough to type a password. True, I can type words I'm familiar with much faster, but I wouldn't rely on it.
The layers piss me off.Agreed. Although I'd never use Photoshop, too complicated and slow.Or I suppose a really clever circuit that looked at the keypress being sent
and adjusted it accordingly. In fact it could then even spellcheck. Why don't
computers do that? My phone corrects spelling without asking, if it's obvious.
My computer only underlines in red (if the particular program does so).
macOS has it, and I have it on. Explains some of my typos.
Globally? Spellchecks in Windows are per app.
There is a global one for macOS. Some apps ignore it.
Let Russia win, then we could have standards.
I like more how, say, Photoshop deals with a color picker. It has its own, BUT
you can also use the system one. That gives you the best of both worlds. >>>>>
It is complex... but it does a LOT. I am out of practice with it, though. >>>
I like them. And layer groups and smart layers and masking layers.
You must have a weird brain. You're making a 3D representation of a flat piece
of paper.
On Sun, 21 May 2023 05:36:33 +0100, Snit <brock.mcnuggets@gmail.com> wrote:
On May 20, 2023 at 7:31:25 PM MST, ""Commander Kinsey"" wrote
<op.149vynrcmvhs6z@ryzen.home>:
Or what you are doing with your hands.
Typing.
I meant in terms of where they are and where the keyboard is. Maybe not >>>>>> consistent?
Possible. That reminds me of a professor, I was fixing his computer, sat in
front of it, and asked him to type his password. He said he needed to sit in
front of the computer. I assumed he didn't want me seeing the password and
said "I'm looking away". He became quite agitated and insisted he couldn't
type at all without being in front of the keyboard. If he was blind I could
understand it.
He relied on muscle memory.
I doubt that's accurate enough to type a password. True, I can type words I'm
familiar with much faster, but I wouldn't rely on it.
I type my iMac password without much thought. My fingers just "know". And my >> typing is crap.
I can do the same with many words. I can type commonly typed words very fast.
But it doesn't stop me being able to type them one letter at a time from another angle like the professor failed to do.
Mind you he was an American....
It is complex... but it does a LOT. I am out of practice with it, though.Globally? Spellchecks in Windows are per app.Or I suppose a really clever circuit that looked at the keypress being sent
and adjusted it accordingly. In fact it could then even spellcheck. Why don't
computers do that? My phone corrects spelling without asking, if it's obvious.
My computer only underlines in red (if the particular program does so).
macOS has it, and I have it on. Explains some of my typos. >>>>>>>>>>>
There is a global one for macOS. Some apps ignore it.
Let Russia win, then we could have standards.
I like more how, say, Photoshop deals with a color picker. It has its own, BUT
you can also use the system one. That gives you the best of both worlds.
Agreed. Although I'd never use Photoshop, too complicated and slow. >>>>>>
The layers piss me off.
I like them. And layer groups and smart layers and masking layers.
You must have a weird brain. You're making a 3D representation of a flat piece
of paper.
I can think in 3D.
I cannot. Well I'm better than some, but not very good.
I did spot immediately when my neighbour was about to cut some drywall the wrong way to fit on a ceiling. He couldn't picture it turned over and didn't believe me until it fitted after he cut it the way I told him to.
On May 20, 2023 at 7:31:25 PM MST, ""Commander Kinsey"" wrote <op.149vynrcmvhs6z@ryzen.home>:
Or what you are doing with your hands.
Typing.
I meant in terms of where they are and where the keyboard is. Maybe not >>>>> consistent?
Possible. That reminds me of a professor, I was fixing his computer, sat in
front of it, and asked him to type his password. He said he needed to sit in
front of the computer. I assumed he didn't want me seeing the password and >>>> said "I'm looking away". He became quite agitated and insisted he couldn't >>>> type at all without being in front of the keyboard. If he was blind I could
understand it.
He relied on muscle memory.
I doubt that's accurate enough to type a password. True, I can type words I'm
familiar with much faster, but I wouldn't rely on it.
I type my iMac password without much thought. My fingers just "know". And my typing is crap.
The layers piss me off.It is complex... but it does a LOT. I am out of practice with it, though. >>>>Globally? Spellchecks in Windows are per app.Or I suppose a really clever circuit that looked at the keypress being sent
and adjusted it accordingly. In fact it could then even spellcheck. Why don't
computers do that? My phone corrects spelling without asking, if it's obvious.
My computer only underlines in red (if the particular program does so).
macOS has it, and I have it on. Explains some of my typos. >>>>>>>>>>
There is a global one for macOS. Some apps ignore it.
Let Russia win, then we could have standards.
I like more how, say, Photoshop deals with a color picker. It has its own, BUT
you can also use the system one. That gives you the best of both worlds.
Agreed. Although I'd never use Photoshop, too complicated and slow. >>>>>
I like them. And layer groups and smart layers and masking layers.
You must have a weird brain. You're making a 3D representation of a flat piece
of paper.
I can think in 3D.
Am 21.05.23 um 06:36 schrieb Snit:
On May 20, 2023 at 7:31:25 PM MST, ""Commander Kinsey"" wrote
You must have a weird brain. You're making a 3D representation of a flat piece
of paper.
I can think in 3D.
I do it 4D.
Excessive X-posting eliminated.
On Jun 14, 2023 at 10:39:30 AM MST, ""Commander Kinsey"" wrote <op.16jhz4z6mvhs6z@ryzen.home>:
On Sun, 21 May 2023 05:36:33 +0100, Snit <brock.mcnuggets@gmail.com> wrote: >>
On May 20, 2023 at 7:31:25 PM MST, ""Commander Kinsey"" wrote
<op.149vynrcmvhs6z@ryzen.home>:
Or what you are doing with your hands.
Typing.
I meant in terms of where they are and where the keyboard is. Maybe not >>>>>>> consistent?
Possible. That reminds me of a professor, I was fixing his computer, sat in
front of it, and asked him to type his password. He said he needed to sit in
front of the computer. I assumed he didn't want me seeing the password and
said "I'm looking away". He became quite agitated and insisted he couldn't
type at all without being in front of the keyboard. If he was blind I could
understand it.
He relied on muscle memory.
I doubt that's accurate enough to type a password. True, I can type words I'm
familiar with much faster, but I wouldn't rely on it.
I type my iMac password without much thought. My fingers just "know". And my
typing is crap.
I can do the same with many words. I can type commonly typed words very fast.
But it doesn't stop me being able to type them one letter at a time from
another angle like the professor failed to do.
Much the same. And sometimes my fingers type the wrong word. In this case with
perfect timing -- "sometimes" became "someone". Maybe I type that more often?
Mind you he was an American....
It is complex... but it does a LOT. I am out of practice with it, though.Globally? Spellchecks in Windows are per app.Or I suppose a really clever circuit that looked at the keypress being sent
and adjusted it accordingly. In fact it could then even spellcheck. Why don't
computers do that? My phone corrects spelling without asking, if it's obvious.
My computer only underlines in red (if the particular program does so).
macOS has it, and I have it on. Explains some of my typos. >>>>>>>>>>>>
There is a global one for macOS. Some apps ignore it.
Let Russia win, then we could have standards.
I like more how, say, Photoshop deals with a color picker. It has its own, BUT
you can also use the system one. That gives you the best of both worlds.
Agreed. Although I'd never use Photoshop, too complicated and slow. >>>>>>>
The layers piss me off.
I like them. And layer groups and smart layers and masking layers.
You must have a weird brain. You're making a 3D representation of a flat piece
of paper.
I can think in 3D.
I cannot. Well I'm better than some, but not very good.
I do not claim to be extraordinary with it... but basic layers are fine for me. Even some 3D modeling... though I have seen people do that better than I do (and they work with that stuff more).
I did spot immediately when my neighbour was about to cut some drywall the >> wrong way to fit on a ceiling. He couldn't picture it turned over and didn't >> believe me until it fitted after he cut it the way I told him to.
I wonder if that type 3D rotational thinking is correlated with 3D layers?
I did spot immediately when my neighbour was about to cut some drywall the >>> wrong way to fit on a ceiling. He couldn't picture it turned over and didn't
believe me until it fitted after he cut it the way I told him to.
I wonder if that type 3D rotational thinking is correlated with 3D layers?
No, I think rotation just requires intelligence (my neighbour is lysdexic), but layers requires better short term memory.
On Jul 22, 2023 at 5:54:12 PM MST, ""Commander Kinsey"" wrote <op.18ifgmahmvhs6z@ryzen>:
No, I think rotation just requires intelligence (my neighbour is lysdexic), >> but layers requires better short term memory.
I did spot immediately when my neighbour was about to cut some drywall the >>>> wrong way to fit on a ceiling. He couldn't picture it turned over and didn't
believe me until it fitted after he cut it the way I told him to.
I wonder if that type 3D rotational thinking is correlated with 3D layers? >>
Rotation might be tied to a form of intelligence... spacial intelligence or something like that. Not sure layers require that much in terms of short term memory, but I can see where it is more than the rotational.
I know I am pretty good with both... but maybe not related at all.
On Mon, 24 Jul 2023 07:59:41 +0100, Snit <brock.mcnuggets@gmail.com> wrote:
On Jul 22, 2023 at 5:54:12 PM MST, ""Commander Kinsey"" wrote
<op.18ifgmahmvhs6z@ryzen>:
No, I think rotation just requires intelligence (my neighbour is lysdexic), >>> but layers requires better short term memory.
I did spot immediately when my neighbour was about to cut some drywall the
wrong way to fit on a ceiling. He couldn't picture it turned over and didn't
believe me until it fitted after he cut it the way I told him to.
I wonder if that type 3D rotational thinking is correlated with 3D layers? >>>
Rotation might be tied to a form of intelligence... spacial intelligence or >> something like that. Not sure layers require that much in terms of short term
memory, but I can see where it is more than the rotational.
I know I am pretty good with both... but maybe not related at all.
My short term memory is about 2 registers. Makes it impossible to add numbers in my head. Not enough room for the two numbers and the result.
On Aug 11, 2023 at 6:54:13 AM MST, ""Commander Kinsey"" wrote <op.19il8nvtmvhs6z@ryzen>:
On Mon, 24 Jul 2023 07:59:41 +0100, Snit <brock.mcnuggets@gmail.com> wrote: >>
On Jul 22, 2023 at 5:54:12 PM MST, ""Commander Kinsey"" wrote
<op.18ifgmahmvhs6z@ryzen>:
I did spot immediately when my neighbour was about to cut some drywall the
wrong way to fit on a ceiling. He couldn't picture it turned over and didn't
believe me until it fitted after he cut it the way I told him to.
I wonder if that type 3D rotational thinking is correlated with 3D layers?
No, I think rotation just requires intelligence (my neighbour is lysdexic),
but layers requires better short term memory.
Rotation might be tied to a form of intelligence... spacial intelligence or >>> something like that. Not sure layers require that much in terms of short term
memory, but I can see where it is more than the rotational.
I know I am pretty good with both... but maybe not related at all.
My short term memory is about 2 registers. Makes it impossible to add numbers
in my head. Not enough room for the two numbers and the result.
In testing I do well... but in day to day life not as much. Not sure what to make of that.
On 11/08/2023 16:09, Snit wrote:
On Aug 11, 2023 at 6:54:13 AM MST, ""Commander Kinsey"" wrote
<op.19il8nvtmvhs6z@ryzen>:
On Mon, 24 Jul 2023 07:59:41 +0100, Snit <brock.mcnuggets@gmail.com> wrote: >>>
On Jul 22, 2023 at 5:54:12 PM MST, ""Commander Kinsey"" wrote
<op.18ifgmahmvhs6z@ryzen>:
I did spot immediately when my neighbour was about to cut some drywall theI wonder if that type 3D rotational thinking is correlated with 3D layers?
wrong way to fit on a ceiling. He couldn't picture it turned over and didn't
believe me until it fitted after he cut it the way I told him to. >>>>>>
No, I think rotation just requires intelligence (my neighbour is lysdexic),
but layers requires better short term memory.
Rotation might be tied to a form of intelligence... spacial intelligence or
something like that. Not sure layers require that much in terms of short term
memory, but I can see where it is more than the rotational.
I know I am pretty good with both... but maybe not related at all.
My short term memory is about 2 registers. Makes it impossible to add numbers
in my head. Not enough room for the two numbers and the result.
In testing I do well... but in day to day life not as much. Not sure what to >> make of that.
Ah! But *YOU* can ask Siri! ;-)
On Aug 11, 2023 at 8:30:23 AM MST, "David Brooks" wrote <jusBM.695192$GMN3.499285@fx16.iad>:
On 11/08/2023 16:09, Snit wrote:
On Aug 11, 2023 at 6:54:13 AM MST, ""Commander Kinsey"" wrote
<op.19il8nvtmvhs6z@ryzen>:
On Mon, 24 Jul 2023 07:59:41 +0100, Snit <brock.mcnuggets@gmail.com> wrote:
On Jul 22, 2023 at 5:54:12 PM MST, ""Commander Kinsey"" wrote
<op.18ifgmahmvhs6z@ryzen>:
I did spot immediately when my neighbour was about to cut some drywall theI wonder if that type 3D rotational thinking is correlated with 3D layers?
wrong way to fit on a ceiling. He couldn't picture it turned over and didn't
believe me until it fitted after he cut it the way I told him to. >>>>>>>
No, I think rotation just requires intelligence (my neighbour is lysdexic),
but layers requires better short term memory.
Rotation might be tied to a form of intelligence... spacial intelligence or
something like that. Not sure layers require that much in terms of short term
memory, but I can see where it is more than the rotational.
I know I am pretty good with both... but maybe not related at all.
My short term memory is about 2 registers. Makes it impossible to add numbers
in my head. Not enough room for the two numbers and the result.
In testing I do well... but in day to day life not as much. Not sure what to
make of that.
Ah! But *YOU* can ask Siri! ;-)
LOL! She does not remember things for me.
I do use the Notes app a lot though.
On 11/08/2023 17:00, Snit wrote:
On Aug 11, 2023 at 8:30:23 AM MST, "David Brooks" wrote
<jusBM.695192$GMN3.499285@fx16.iad>:
On 11/08/2023 16:09, Snit wrote:
On Aug 11, 2023 at 6:54:13 AM MST, ""Commander Kinsey"" wrote
<op.19il8nvtmvhs6z@ryzen>:
On Mon, 24 Jul 2023 07:59:41 +0100, Snit <brock.mcnuggets@gmail.com> wrote:
On Jul 22, 2023 at 5:54:12 PM MST, ""Commander Kinsey"" wrote
<op.18ifgmahmvhs6z@ryzen>:
I did spot immediately when my neighbour was about to cut some drywall theI wonder if that type 3D rotational thinking is correlated with 3D layers?
wrong way to fit on a ceiling. He couldn't picture it turned over and didn't
believe me until it fitted after he cut it the way I told him to. >>>>>>>>
No, I think rotation just requires intelligence (my neighbour is lysdexic),
but layers requires better short term memory.
Rotation might be tied to a form of intelligence... spacial intelligence or
something like that. Not sure layers require that much in terms of short term
memory, but I can see where it is more than the rotational.
I know I am pretty good with both... but maybe not related at all.
My short term memory is about 2 registers. Makes it impossible to add numbers
in my head. Not enough room for the two numbers and the result.
In testing I do well... but in day to day life not as much. Not sure what to
make of that.
Ah! But *YOU* can ask Siri! ;-)
LOL! She does not remember things for me.
Maybe not, but she CAN do arithmetic! :-D
I do use the Notes app a lot though.
Me too. Excellent facility.
On Aug 11, 2023 at 9:46:26 AM MST, "David Brooks" wrote <CBtBM.430206$TCKc.115383@fx13.iad>:
On 11/08/2023 17:00, Snit wrote:
On Aug 11, 2023 at 8:30:23 AM MST, "David Brooks" wrote
<jusBM.695192$GMN3.499285@fx16.iad>:
On 11/08/2023 16:09, Snit wrote:
On Aug 11, 2023 at 6:54:13 AM MST, ""Commander Kinsey"" wrote
<op.19il8nvtmvhs6z@ryzen>:
On Mon, 24 Jul 2023 07:59:41 +0100, Snit <brock.mcnuggets@gmail.com> wrote:
On Jul 22, 2023 at 5:54:12 PM MST, ""Commander Kinsey"" wroteMy short term memory is about 2 registers. Makes it impossible to add numbers
<op.18ifgmahmvhs6z@ryzen>:
I did spot immediately when my neighbour was about to cut some drywall theI wonder if that type 3D rotational thinking is correlated with 3D layers?
wrong way to fit on a ceiling. He couldn't picture it turned over and didn't
believe me until it fitted after he cut it the way I told him to. >>>>>>>>>
No, I think rotation just requires intelligence (my neighbour is lysdexic),
but layers requires better short term memory.
Rotation might be tied to a form of intelligence... spacial intelligence or
something like that. Not sure layers require that much in terms of short term
memory, but I can see where it is more than the rotational.
I know I am pretty good with both... but maybe not related at all. >>>>>>
in my head. Not enough room for the two numbers and the result.
In testing I do well... but in day to day life not as much. Not sure what to
make of that.
Ah! But *YOU* can ask Siri! ;-)
LOL! She does not remember things for me.
Maybe not, but she CAN do arithmetic! :-D
Yes she can.
I do use the Notes app a lot though.
Me too. Excellent facility.
And getting better with time.
On 11/08/2023 17:48, Snit wrote:
On Aug 11, 2023 at 9:46:26 AM MST, "David Brooks" wrote
<CBtBM.430206$TCKc.115383@fx13.iad>:
On 11/08/2023 17:00, Snit wrote:
On Aug 11, 2023 at 8:30:23 AM MST, "David Brooks" wrote
<jusBM.695192$GMN3.499285@fx16.iad>:
On 11/08/2023 16:09, Snit wrote:
On Aug 11, 2023 at 6:54:13 AM MST, ""Commander Kinsey"" wrote
<op.19il8nvtmvhs6z@ryzen>:
On Mon, 24 Jul 2023 07:59:41 +0100, Snit <brock.mcnuggets@gmail.com> wrote:
On Jul 22, 2023 at 5:54:12 PM MST, ""Commander Kinsey"" wroteMy short term memory is about 2 registers. Makes it impossible to add numbers
<op.18ifgmahmvhs6z@ryzen>:
I did spot immediately when my neighbour was about to cut some drywall theI wonder if that type 3D rotational thinking is correlated with 3D layers?
wrong way to fit on a ceiling. He couldn't picture it turned over and didn't
believe me until it fitted after he cut it the way I told him to. >>>>>>>>>>
No, I think rotation just requires intelligence (my neighbour is lysdexic),
but layers requires better short term memory.
Rotation might be tied to a form of intelligence... spacial intelligence or
something like that. Not sure layers require that much in terms of short term
memory, but I can see where it is more than the rotational.
I know I am pretty good with both... but maybe not related at all. >>>>>>>
in my head. Not enough room for the two numbers and the result.
In testing I do well... but in day to day life not as much. Not sure what to
make of that.
Ah! But *YOU* can ask Siri! ;-)
LOL! She does not remember things for me.
Maybe not, but she CAN do arithmetic! :-D
Yes she can.
I do use the Notes app a lot though.
Me too. Excellent facility.
And getting better with time.
I particularly like the fact that Notes is stored in the iCloud so that nothing is lost from there if one erases one's hard drive!
VERY useful! ;-)
I particularly like the fact that Notes is stored in the iCloud so that >nothing is lost from there if one erases one's hard drive!
VERY useful! ;-)
On Fri, 11 Aug 2023 17:51:30 +0100, David Brooks <David.B@nomail.afraid.org> wrote:
I particularly like the fact that Notes is stored in the iCloud so that
nothing is lost from there if one erases one's hard drive!
VERY useful! ;-)
Is that where/how you store your dossiers?
On Aug 11, 2023 at 6:54:13 AM MST, ""Commander Kinsey"" wrote <op.19il8nvtmvhs6z@ryzen>:
On Mon, 24 Jul 2023 07:59:41 +0100, Snit <brock.mcnuggets@gmail.com> wrote: >>
On Jul 22, 2023 at 5:54:12 PM MST, ""Commander Kinsey"" wrote
<op.18ifgmahmvhs6z@ryzen>:
I did spot immediately when my neighbour was about to cut some drywall the
wrong way to fit on a ceiling. He couldn't picture it turned over and didn't
believe me until it fitted after he cut it the way I told him to.
I wonder if that type 3D rotational thinking is correlated with 3D layers?
No, I think rotation just requires intelligence (my neighbour is lysdexic),
but layers requires better short term memory.
Rotation might be tied to a form of intelligence... spacial intelligence or >>> something like that. Not sure layers require that much in terms of short term
memory, but I can see where it is more than the rotational.
I know I am pretty good with both... but maybe not related at all.
My short term memory is about 2 registers. Makes it impossible to add numbers
in my head. Not enough room for the two numbers and the result.
In testing I do well... but in day to day life not as much. Not sure what to make of that.
On Fri, 11 Aug 2023 16:09:48 +0100, Snit <brock.mcnuggets@gmail.com> wrote:
On Aug 11, 2023 at 6:54:13 AM MST, ""Commander Kinsey"" wrote
<op.19il8nvtmvhs6z@ryzen>:
On Mon, 24 Jul 2023 07:59:41 +0100, Snit <brock.mcnuggets@gmail.com> wrote: >>>
On Jul 22, 2023 at 5:54:12 PM MST, ""Commander Kinsey"" wrote
<op.18ifgmahmvhs6z@ryzen>:
I did spot immediately when my neighbour was about to cut some drywall theI wonder if that type 3D rotational thinking is correlated with 3D layers?
wrong way to fit on a ceiling. He couldn't picture it turned over and didn't
believe me until it fitted after he cut it the way I told him to. >>>>>>
No, I think rotation just requires intelligence (my neighbour is lysdexic),
but layers requires better short term memory.
Rotation might be tied to a form of intelligence... spacial intelligence or
something like that. Not sure layers require that much in terms of short term
memory, but I can see where it is more than the rotational.
I know I am pretty good with both... but maybe not related at all.
My short term memory is about 2 registers. Makes it impossible to add numbers
in my head. Not enough room for the two numbers and the result.
In testing I do well... but in day to day life not as much. Not sure what to >> make of that.
The tests must be unrealistic. Could you add 57 and 39 in your head?
I would do.... 50+30 is 80 and 7 and 9 is 16, add the 16 to the.... I've forgotten the first bit.
On Aug 29, 2023 at 5:36:15 PM MST, ""Commander Kinsey"" wrote <op.2agryp1amvhs6z@ryzen>:
On Fri, 11 Aug 2023 16:09:48 +0100, Snit <brock.mcnuggets@gmail.com> wrote: >>
On Aug 11, 2023 at 6:54:13 AM MST, ""Commander Kinsey"" wrote
<op.19il8nvtmvhs6z@ryzen>:
On Mon, 24 Jul 2023 07:59:41 +0100, Snit <brock.mcnuggets@gmail.com> wrote:
On Jul 22, 2023 at 5:54:12 PM MST, ""Commander Kinsey"" wrote
<op.18ifgmahmvhs6z@ryzen>:
I did spot immediately when my neighbour was about to cut some drywall theI wonder if that type 3D rotational thinking is correlated with 3D layers?
wrong way to fit on a ceiling. He couldn't picture it turned over and didn't
believe me until it fitted after he cut it the way I told him to. >>>>>>>
No, I think rotation just requires intelligence (my neighbour is lysdexic),
but layers requires better short term memory.
Rotation might be tied to a form of intelligence... spacial intelligence or
something like that. Not sure layers require that much in terms of short term
memory, but I can see where it is more than the rotational.
I know I am pretty good with both... but maybe not related at all.
My short term memory is about 2 registers. Makes it impossible to add numbers
in my head. Not enough room for the two numbers and the result.
In testing I do well... but in day to day life not as much. Not sure what to
make of that.
The tests must be unrealistic. Could you add 57 and 39 in your head?
Yes. 96. In my head I take one from 57 to make it 56 and add it to the 39. Then 56+40 is easily 50+40+6.
On Wed, 30 Aug 2023 05:19:53 +0100, Snit <brock.mcnuggets@gmail.com> wrote:
On Aug 29, 2023 at 5:36:15 PM MST, ""Commander Kinsey"" wrote
<op.2agryp1amvhs6z@ryzen>:
On Fri, 11 Aug 2023 16:09:48 +0100, Snit <brock.mcnuggets@gmail.com> wrote: >>>
On Aug 11, 2023 at 6:54:13 AM MST, ""Commander Kinsey"" wrote
<op.19il8nvtmvhs6z@ryzen>:
On Mon, 24 Jul 2023 07:59:41 +0100, Snit <brock.mcnuggets@gmail.com> wrote:
On Jul 22, 2023 at 5:54:12 PM MST, ""Commander Kinsey"" wrote
<op.18ifgmahmvhs6z@ryzen>:
I did spot immediately when my neighbour was about to cut some drywall theI wonder if that type 3D rotational thinking is correlated with 3D layers?
wrong way to fit on a ceiling. He couldn't picture it turned over and didn't
believe me until it fitted after he cut it the way I told him to. >>>>>>>>
No, I think rotation just requires intelligence (my neighbour is lysdexic),
but layers requires better short term memory.
Rotation might be tied to a form of intelligence... spacial intelligence or
something like that. Not sure layers require that much in terms of short term
memory, but I can see where it is more than the rotational.
I know I am pretty good with both... but maybe not related at all.
My short term memory is about 2 registers. Makes it impossible to add numbers
in my head. Not enough room for the two numbers and the result.
In testing I do well... but in day to day life not as much. Not sure what to
make of that.
The tests must be unrealistic. Could you add 57 and 39 in your head?
Yes. 96. In my head I take one from 57 to make it 56 and add it to the 39. >> Then 56+40 is easily 50+40+6.
Longwinded, I just add the tens first - 50+30 is 80. Then the units - 7+9 is 16. The answer is eighty sixteen.
But I couldn't have done that if you spoke the numbers to me. I would forget one while manipulating.
So what in day to day life is difficult?
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