This Is How A Court Reporter Typewriter Works

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  • Опубликовано: 14 июн 2024
  • I'm still so confused by this. Special thanks to Isabelle for explaining what goes on behind the keyboard! Follow her on Instagram: / isabellelumsden and TikTok: / isabellelumsden
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Комментарии • 2,4 тыс.

  • @youtubesresidentfbiagent8735
    @youtubesresidentfbiagent8735 3 года назад +9018

    Me before watching this video: “Oh cool, how does it work?”
    Me after watching this video: “Oh cool, how does it work?”

    • @Mr.D.C.
      @Mr.D.C. 3 года назад +41

      Are you really the FBI??

    • @BreMue
      @BreMue 3 года назад +63

      User name does NOT check out lol

    • @feliciabailey8092
      @feliciabailey8092 3 года назад +143

      When the FBI is confused you know it's complicated

    • @juandiegofm
      @juandiegofm 3 года назад +79

      Yep, I think that this is the first time that I was a little confused at the beggining of a video... pretty much confused right at the middle...and absolutly crossed eyed at the end....

    • @wedchidnaok1150
      @wedchidnaok1150 3 года назад +9

      Before ____: It seems interesting.
      After ____: It seems distopic.
      ____ = a convoluted showcase.
      My suggestion is less face-time, less combination-time, and more transcription-time. How does one phrase goes between different filters, and what are their limits? I already know of the automatic-tech limits; this video should be about it's topic, foremost. (The informatics; not the interface mechanics nor their facial avatar.) Thnx4the showcase, tho.

  • @tambert3897
    @tambert3897 3 года назад +10080

    Judge: "Can you read back what was said to the court."
    Stenographer: "hoffhaohfuabiubluabcauealkjhdiafh;ioehaijd;basdhg"

    • @retro34
      @retro34 3 года назад +142

      Delivery's all wrong, butchered it

    • @angiewilliams5188
      @angiewilliams5188 3 года назад +15

      😂

    • @Blue_Azure101
      @Blue_Azure101 3 года назад +64

      The judge would totally understand it

    • @StevenRockwood
      @StevenRockwood 3 года назад +75

      Hey isn't that a Welsh town name?

    • @masterimbecile
      @masterimbecile 3 года назад +61

      @@StevenRockwood No I think you're referring to ayzgsjalsosowkwjahgdxysmwozyfhwnqofuyci299exxj6261

  • @NinjaDuckie
    @NinjaDuckie 3 года назад +92

    Former court reporting tech support engineer here. Stenotype is an incredible skill. Typists pay a small fortune for their keyboards and the training and software necessary to read and execute the code they output. And due to being an extremely niche skill, they also have the ability to charge... pretty much what they want. So it's expensive to get into but well worth the payoff if you can manage the output.
    We actually did experiment, briefly, with the partial replacement of stenography by voice to text software (we used Dragon but there's a few decent ones). Initial tests were ... less than amazing. We figure that it COULD be done for a long-running case, with the caveat that you'd have to train each speaker with the software for a few hours beforehand, and be edited against the audio afterwards, but at that point, why aren't you just running a stenographer in the room in the first place?
    We did have some limited success using voice-to-text for remote depositions where we weren't able to secure a stenographer in time. But as Isabelle says, voice to text technology is nowhere near replicating the accuracy or versatility of a real stenographer.

    • @ShawnFumo
      @ShawnFumo 2 года назад +1

      I wonder if the open steno software and hardware coming out lately is going to eventually put pressure on the regular steno manufacturers, at least at the student level. I'm sure a $5k machine might be worth it when you're a professional court reporter, but I'd rather pay $100 to start with and see if I like it at all instead of paying $1k for a student machine.

    • @TheStevenWhiting
      @TheStevenWhiting 3 месяца назад +2

      Do they audio record the cases as well? So if needed a stenographer could refer back to the recorded tapes?

    • @NinjaDuckie
      @NinjaDuckie 3 месяца назад +2

      @@TheStevenWhiting Typically, yes. Our stenograph typists often worked with another person editing the transcript next to them who had access to a recording of usually four, maximum eight, audio channels which were synchronised to the transcript editing software line-by-line. So you could get a live playback of the transcript immediately for editing, and export the audio for the transcript production team to match up to in case of later reported errors to be corrected. This also enabled our staff to finish earlier in the day since they had less need to stay behind in the office to finish editing.
      The real badass typists worked alone and did the editing live during pauses in conversation. Awesome to watch.

    • @paulosouza449
      @paulosouza449 3 месяца назад +1

      Have you guys tried newer AI technology? It doesn't seem like a skill that couldn't be replaced by AI in a few years...

    • @random6033
      @random6033 Месяц назад

      you can now buy one for like $50 lol

  • @AdamAwesombrero
    @AdamAwesombrero 2 года назад +70

    But who records what the stenographer is saying when they’re asked to read something back?

    • @EnjoyCocaColaLight
      @EnjoyCocaColaLight 2 года назад

      The steten.

    • @elkayelena
      @elkayelena 2 года назад +3

      Oh wow!! How funny, I never thought of that. Good point 👍🏼

    • @NikkiKNuvo
      @NikkiKNuvo Год назад +3

      The matrix glitches.

    • @zenithperigee7442
      @zenithperigee7442 3 месяца назад

      My question is, what about those Stenographers who appear to be "speaking into a cone-shaped recorder"....

    • @hadley407
      @hadley407 Месяц назад +1

      Nobody writes it down when they read back the court minutes

  • @TigranAbgarjan
    @TigranAbgarjan 3 года назад +12112

    Defendant in court room: *"Hi."*
    Court reporter on typewriter: *"STWHKPSORWTHUSRSPEKCTCTKRPWSTKPWRPPHTWRKSKRWTSTEKHRWT"*

    • @richadhakal4669
      @richadhakal4669 3 года назад +88

      LMFAOOOOO

    • @untypical-e1564
      @untypical-e1564 3 года назад +40

      LMAOOO

    • @krazyrabbit1735
      @krazyrabbit1735 3 года назад +183

      Lol. It seems that way, but it’s not really that difficult. It’s all based off of phonetics. The left or initial side is for prefixes and the right or final side is for suffixes. This is taught later on in the theory. An EU pushed together makes an I. So hi would be HEU.

    • @BxCortez2050
      @BxCortez2050 3 года назад +6

      Its still amazing

    • @lululipes4382
      @lululipes4382 3 года назад +9

      fun fact, im pretty sure it'd be "HAOEU" so yeah ure not wrong

  • @frantisekvasil2340
    @frantisekvasil2340 3 года назад +15897

    My brain capacity cant handle this bye

  • @fae206
    @fae206 2 года назад +20

    I’ve been studying court reporting for four years including through two minor brain injuries (one of them was when I hit my head on a metal safe and had to have a CAT scan). Right now I’m working on 200wpm

  • @dickthedorkwing6082
    @dickthedorkwing6082 3 года назад +54

    I had a blind friend in middle school try to teach me how to type on his braille machine and it broke my brain. This video just caused my brain to melt down on a quantum scale.

  • @angelwings2426
    @angelwings2426 3 года назад +8187

    My mother is a court reporter and whenever she's asked to confirm something from the record, she gets nervous because after doing it for so long she gets in the zone, and she thinks "did I actually write what they said earlier?" And sure enough she always does... always was super impressed it's like she knows a whole other language

    • @rosegold973
      @rosegold973 3 года назад +65

      That’s AMAZING 🤩

    • @shannonhensley2942
      @shannonhensley2942 3 года назад +171

      It is a whole other language. She's awesome!

    • @Justice2Hearts
      @Justice2Hearts 3 года назад +39

      That's incredible actually.

    • @onnikg
      @onnikg 3 года назад +6

      Now, do they use recorder?

    • @angelwings2426
      @angelwings2426 3 года назад +21

      @@onnikg they do not - depending on the type of hearing and the state/city, it is mandatory that you have a licensed stenographer to make a transcript of the session

  • @caffeinatednation8885
    @caffeinatednation8885 3 года назад +7145

    Respect for stenographers: 📈

    • @SkyyPiano
      @SkyyPiano 3 года назад +106

      @@quackityalt7213 lol. It is not easy to learn. There's a 97% dropout rate in court reporting schools. And QWERTY keyboards only type at 60 to 100 WPM, which isn't helpful when you need to capture people who talk at 140 to 300 WPM.

    • @SkyyPiano
      @SkyyPiano 3 года назад +70

      @@Sora_Abyss Yes, there is an abysmal failure rate, which is the reason why stenographers are in such high demand and why they get paid well. It's technically easier to become an attorney than to become a court reporter.

    • @crystal-9247
      @crystal-9247 3 года назад +42

      @@quackityalt7213 you saying it's easier to use a normal keyboard for court reporting just shows you don't know anything about it

    • @quackityalt7213
      @quackityalt7213 3 года назад +1

      @@crystal-9247 or it shows that u have a slow typing speed

    • @crystal-9247
      @crystal-9247 3 года назад +26

      @@quackityalt7213 Honey read the comment above us, no matter how fast your typing speed is a qwerty keyboard won't cut it. Or watch the video at least lmao

  • @MatthewHarrisLawPLLC
    @MatthewHarrisLawPLLC 3 года назад +221

    Before COVID, when we still had in-person hearings, I would frequently introduce my client to the Court Reporter so they could see this process. Court Reporters are essential to our legal system, and educating the public is important!

    • @DBrown-vg1fi
      @DBrown-vg1fi 2 года назад +4

      Thank you, Counsel 🙏

    • @M-ps6ve
      @M-ps6ve 15 дней назад

      Make the difficult yet necessary decision to wrap up your stay here on earth

  • @daienaa
    @daienaa 2 года назад +26

    I’m a court reporter (my first year) and I really had to push myself to the limits. It was hard for me to learn steno but I don’t regret it 😊

    • @neonrays28
      @neonrays28 2 года назад +1

      I'm thinking of heading back to school to finish. I was at 140 speed. Do you make good money? Is work still available?

    • @shayleeboo12
      @shayleeboo12 2 месяца назад

      Did you go to school for it or were you trained on the job? I have my BS in Criminal Justice and applied for a court reporting position, and have an interview next week. Worried that I won't pick it up easily at all.

  • @alexandralipovich3241
    @alexandralipovich3241 3 года назад +5423

    My mom did this for 35 years! I used to read to her when I was little and she would practice her stenography.. such a fond memory and a lost art.

    • @bellapoi
      @bellapoi 3 года назад +133

      i'm studying this now! it's so fascinating and so much fun! i agree it is an art that desperately needs more attention, so many people don't even know this is a potential career for them!

    • @Etta319
      @Etta319 3 года назад +100

      @@bellapoi soo true. I’m studying now for it. My sister has been doing it for over 20 years now and she still loves it. She works at a courthouse in Dallas making 135,000 a year with lots of freedom. I cannot wait to get there 😊

    • @Angelajazzb
      @Angelajazzb 3 года назад +86

      It’s not lost! I’m in school for it now. There’s a very big niche community of court reporters and students. Your mom sounds awesome.

    • @tourmii
      @tourmii 3 года назад +8

      @@Etta319 does she have other job duties? genuinely curious what the job entails for that kind of pay

    • @wandablanks5629
      @wandablanks5629 3 года назад +52

      It's not a lost art. In fact, there is great demand for stenographers in the U.S. now. It's a wonderful career and I would encourage anyone who is interested to visit the National Court Reporters Association website to learn more about it.

  • @KameronCrawford
    @KameronCrawford 3 года назад +1120

    Sat next to the person using a stenography machine who was adding captions live during a presentation I went to last year and I was so distracted in fascination watching them type that I couldn’t even tell you what the presentation was about.

    • @emijunkai
      @emijunkai 3 года назад +35

      That would be me. Watching people type is satisfying, and fascinating on a different keyboard or language.

  • @satan69
    @satan69 3 года назад +18

    we have a book for shorthand stenography at home that i opened exactly _once_ and then said no thank you

  • @leleskoob2011
    @leleskoob2011 3 года назад +24

    I used to be a communications assistant so I’d close caption for the deaf and or hearing impaired and man when I say I have respect for these guys. I was close captioning on a regular keyboard and I struggled. So to dive in and learn a whole new typing system is so cool and I respect it so much!!

  • @rblx_ian9055
    @rblx_ian9055 3 года назад +1193

    girl i just woke up my brain cant handle this rn

    • @daywalker3735
      @daywalker3735 3 года назад +43

      I've been awake all day and my brain can't handle this

    • @lorenzcobretti9862
      @lorenzcobretti9862 3 года назад +14

      i just had coffee and still lost all energy for the day.

    • @aignerlemay
      @aignerlemay 3 года назад +2

      And she talkin a lil too fast.. Wait a min I gotta collect my 2 braincells

    • @randomfyasmry
      @randomfyasmry 3 года назад +2

      My brain cells already left the chat

    • @ironnads7975
      @ironnads7975 3 года назад

      Then why are you watching this?

  • @caitlinmeeks5955
    @caitlinmeeks5955 3 года назад +2174

    im a court reporter and its literally like learning a different language. There's also multiple ways to spell different words. she spelled "zoo" as "SKAO" but on my machine, if i wanted to spell out "zoo" I would type it as "S*AO". It's complicated when you first learn because its a completely different way of typing, but you get used to it quickly.

    • @okaycat12
      @okaycat12 3 года назад +88

      Agreed! I would spell zoo as SKPWAO. I get confused myself when I try to explain it to people lol

    • @loveforeignaccents
      @loveforeignaccents 3 года назад +36

      I would use the whole left side of the keyboard for the letter Z and then, of course, add my AO for the "oo" sound. I'm a court reporter here in Chicago. Where are you located?

    • @DaBlueMonster
      @DaBlueMonster 3 года назад +12

      Wouldn't Speech to Text technology be a worry for you? You'd just need to be there to indicate/mark exactly who is speaking. Or eventually at some point every key person in the court would have their own lapel mic and the software would know which mic channel belongs to whom (Programmed in by operator) and automatically follow and activate when triggered by spoken word. As you stated in the video, this tech isn't perfect yet, but do you see the end to stenography within 10 years or what's your estimate on that?

    • @cutepiku
      @cutepiku 3 года назад +78

      @@DaBlueMonster I was a medical transcriptionist and one day when I felt bored, I decided to test out some speech to text technology. It... really has nothing on people. Accents, be it regional or language, are a bit too much for this technology. It has a loooong way to go.

    • @loveforeignaccents
      @loveforeignaccents 3 года назад +40

      @@DaBlueMonster No. Speech to text wouldn't have the capacity to interrupt somebody when they either don't hear something or more than one person is speaking at a time, which is all too common in most proceedings. Our profession will live on, I believe, for a very, very long while.

  • @benjamingradinski6720
    @benjamingradinski6720 2 года назад +8

    Thank You! I'm watching a court documentary and I've always wondered how does that thing make words. Yours was the 1st video I clicked on, very well spoken, very well explained in a short space of time. You make it look so easy, yet I know I'd never be able to learn it (looks too hard).
    I always thought this machine was used so others in court couldn't read it lol :)

  • @headron66
    @headron66 Год назад +1

    Oh, I always wondered about this. I learned to be a touch typist over 40 years ago along with shorthand and never used it for work but my every thought is written in shorthand including my message list and diaries. I still have my silver Reed SR 180 typewriter which I use in my crafting. This was wonderful to see. I’ve learned something new today and I am impressed 🙌🏻❤️

  • @RAYMUFC8
    @RAYMUFC8 3 года назад +1677

    Watched the whole video and still don't get it. Think I will stick to my normal keyboard.

    • @ArmoniSloan
      @ArmoniSloan 3 года назад +28

      Yeah this went over my head too !!

    • @natalielear4902
      @natalielear4902 3 года назад +10

      Glad I wasn't the only one!

    • @darthmusturd9526
      @darthmusturd9526 3 года назад +9

      basically its based off of phonetics

    • @FirstLast-uj9ud
      @FirstLast-uj9ud 3 года назад +81

      Basically, instead of typing out words letter by letter like you would on a QWERTY keyboard, words are typed by pressing down multiple letters at once, kind of like if you were playing a chord on a piano. Each word is a "chord" with a different letter combination, so in order to be fluent at stenography you essentially have to memorise a small dictionary of letter combinations.

    • @ArmoniSloan
      @ArmoniSloan 3 года назад +11

      @@FirstLast-uj9ud INSANE

  • @carpediem7685
    @carpediem7685 3 года назад +817

    Imagine just forgetting the letter placement in the middle of it and you're just sitting there like 👁️👄👁️

    • @jolynele2587
      @jolynele2587 3 года назад +9

      well... you can always write them down on the actual keys so you don't have to memorise it too much

    • @stargirl7646
      @stargirl7646 2 года назад +19

      @@lillypatterson2590 WOW!! I would say that sounds like magic (and it DOES). It also reminds me of how I can play piano while I’m thinking of something else entirely lol. I’m reading the notes, playing the keys, and completely zoned out lol

    • @stargirl7646
      @stargirl7646 2 года назад +1

      @@lillypatterson2590 oh wow, it’d be cool to try someday!

    • @demelzapoldark3035
      @demelzapoldark3035 2 года назад +3

      LOL! A Stenography Students nightmare! Wake up in a cold sweat. LOL!

    • @OhItsKobi
      @OhItsKobi 2 года назад +1

      Lol that would be horrible, but luckily I think the stenographers would be more than competent by the time they end up in a courtroom - hopefully.. XD

  • @khizarzulfi8517
    @khizarzulfi8517 3 года назад +5

    Even being a physicist, I have never come across this much technicality. Hats off to stenographers or whatever you call it.🤯

  • @OleJoe
    @OleJoe 3 года назад +4

    When I was in college I remember Court reporter students with their machines practicing. The output however was on a paper strip like a cash register recit tape.
    This was like 1974.

  • @de4830
    @de4830 3 года назад +505

    the minimal keys keyboard almost looks like a braille writer!

    • @captianbubble
      @captianbubble 3 года назад +8

      Yeah! This really intrigued me!

    • @ps374249
      @ps374249 3 года назад +11

      I was thinking the same thing. Since people who are blind (or at least, those who were blind during childhood) are exposed to typing with multiple keys at once when they first begin learning to write and type, I wonder if this would come easier to them. It seems like the career might be a good one for blind individuals. Especially since with modern tech, the computer can read back what was written, so they don't need a braille display or something to be able to read what they typed.

    • @robotkabot7541
      @robotkabot7541 3 года назад +3

      @@ps374249 interesting thought. but i think a blind person doesn't have the connection between alphabetical letters and their phonetic sound. Also the keys are blank and all feel the same. And they can't backwards-check their work because they can't read (backwards reading is gonna be a mess)
      you made a good point though :)

    • @Vini-xf8zq
      @Vini-xf8zq 3 года назад

      Off topic but I really love your profile picture.

  • @diego246
    @diego246 3 года назад +375

    Person: hello to everyone
    Court reporter be like: HEHRHRO TO ESRERKWROTPHE

    • @rosegold973
      @rosegold973 3 года назад +2

      🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @stormshyla
      @stormshyla 3 года назад +4

      I’ve been laughing at this for 6 minutes

    • @rosegold973
      @rosegold973 2 года назад

      @@lillypatterson2590 lmao I caught that 🤣🤣

  • @kbarts316
    @kbarts316 2 года назад +11

    This’d be too stressful for me 😰
    Major respect to the stenographers who can do this with ease. 👍

  • @marionmorgan5972
    @marionmorgan5972 3 года назад +2

    You must have a super memory to remember all of that! You go girl!

  • @shiranails0137
    @shiranails0137 3 года назад +336

    It's like riding a bike but when you turn right, the tire went left

    • @robotkabot7541
      @robotkabot7541 3 года назад +1

      one can learn that too...

    • @CMThota
      @CMThota 3 года назад +32

      it's more like riding a bike but when you turn right, the bicycle bursts into flames, turns into a unicycle and flips upside down

    • @aiko9393
      @aiko9393 3 года назад +2

      I think reverse bike is easier than stenography 😅

    • @jay-tbl
      @jay-tbl 3 года назад +1

      It's like riding a bicycle and to go right you turn right, but to go left you slam both brakes and ring the bell for some reason

  • @tianshisake2730
    @tianshisake2730 3 года назад +1678

    when she said "Z" instead of "Z" i felt that.

    • @shivaniarunkumar1248
      @shivaniarunkumar1248 3 года назад +86

      Zed!!

    • @jenzram2629
      @jenzram2629 3 года назад +60

      She's canadian

    • @Vini-xf8zq
      @Vini-xf8zq 3 года назад +51

      I found it so odd when I'd watch American shows or movies they'd say "zee" . In my 25 years I've always come across people who say "zed"

    • @makeanjosmile
      @makeanjosmile 3 года назад +5

      Zed I thought she was German

    • @rakeshmeitei1680
      @rakeshmeitei1680 3 года назад +12

      What's the difference between this "Z" and this "Z" 🤣😂?Jk
      I pronounce it as Zed too but I didn't expect her to pronounce it like that at first😜.

  • @thomaswatkins3686
    @thomaswatkins3686 2 года назад +1

    You are talented. I wondered how this worked. I can’t imagine ever seeing that machine as you do.
    Bravo!

  • @raynemichelle2996
    @raynemichelle2996 3 года назад +5

    My mum was a court clerk. She usually handled all the exhibits, but sometimes she would have to record proceedings. She audio recorded all proceedings and handwrote notes using shorthand. She did not know stenography, and most court clerks did not use it. This is in Canada. Unfortunately, she basically got carpal tunnel.

  • @kellygirlaj
    @kellygirlaj 3 года назад +854

    I'm so glad I never became a court reporter, smh.

    • @castielsgranny4308
      @castielsgranny4308 3 года назад +10

      It would’ve been very interesting to me. I love that machine!

    • @ArmoniSloan
      @ArmoniSloan 3 года назад +26

      People would always tell me to because I type fast, but this is next level !!

    • @loveforeignaccents
      @loveforeignaccents 3 года назад +36

      @@ArmoniSloan Funny enough, I had a friend in court reporting school who could type faster than anybody else on a typewriter but couldn't pick up the actual machine, so she ended up dropping out.

    • @ArmoniSloan
      @ArmoniSloan 3 года назад +6

      @@loveforeignaccents Oh my goshhhhhhhh , that's pretty intense .

    • @nikhilananth4383
      @nikhilananth4383 3 года назад +4

      Do they still do stenography virtual court?

  • @alphaxard1
    @alphaxard1 3 года назад +700

    prosecutor: the suspect was seen pacing around llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogochrailway station wearing a hoodie...
    Stenographer: FML

  • @maggot6150
    @maggot6150 2 года назад

    I'm glad you cleared that up for me

  • @pamela930
    @pamela930 3 года назад +2

    My elderly mother is a retired court stenographer. She used to be incredibly fast and accurate at shorthand, then decided to try this. She studied for 4-5 years, (while still a secretary at a major aircraft plant), took her State exams, and became a highly respected court reporter for many years. Finally had to retire because of carpal tunnel. She made good money at this, tho! And, really enjoyed it. Even thought of moving to Alaska because they pay about 3-4 times as much as lower 48!

  • @aigoochamnaa
    @aigoochamnaa 3 года назад +546

    This is a great profession, ya'll! I'm a court reporter, and I love my job. There's a reporter shortage so there's plenty of work as of now.

    • @castielsgranny4308
      @castielsgranny4308 3 года назад +9

      Good to know!

    • @okaycat12
      @okaycat12 3 года назад +23

      Agreed! I'm a court reporter too. We need more reporters!

    • @ArmoniSloan
      @ArmoniSloan 3 года назад +15

      I bet it really is awesome seeing what happens in the courts first hand !!

    • @BullshitDetector
      @BullshitDetector 3 года назад +21

      How much do you make?

    • @ashleyjlucio96
      @ashleyjlucio96 3 года назад +8

      I'm planning on becoming a scopist.

  • @odysseus2k1
    @odysseus2k1 3 года назад +639

    This is harder than a piano. And I've never played piano in my life.

    • @RainbowQuartz2.0
      @RainbowQuartz2.0 3 года назад +10

      I wouldn't say that, but definitely really hard.

    • @trumpetplayerdude9838
      @trumpetplayerdude9838 3 года назад +35

      @@RainbowQuartz2.0 as a piano player this is much harder

    • @RainbowQuartz2.0
      @RainbowQuartz2.0 3 года назад +9

      @@trumpetplayerdude9838 agreed, I was watching more videos of this, and this is so much harder. I though it was kind of easy like normal typing but only like a little harder. But nope, this takes a long time to learn and process. So hard.

    • @ps374249
      @ps374249 3 года назад +27

      ​@@trumpetplayerdude9838 I disagree. Stenos are only accounting for words said, it's one distinct element of sound. In playing an instrument, you've got to account for so many more elements of sound. If it were just pitch and rhythm, the 2 might be comparable, but when you add in dynamics, articulation, and tempo you're talking about replicating 5 things at once.
      It's not that stenography isn't hard, it's just comparing completely different things.

    • @robotkabot7541
      @robotkabot7541 3 года назад +6

      @@ps374249 exactly my thought. one is just information saving and the other is making music which is much more complicated.
      one could argue tho that getting a sense of which key sounds like which tone is easier on a piano

  • @TachyBunker
    @TachyBunker 3 года назад +3

    This is like algebra level maths and I'm not even at this level.

  • @David-jn4fx
    @David-jn4fx 2 года назад

    Wow.. amazing.. this is way over my head.. Nice job and for all your work!

  • @empireravenshadow5
    @empireravenshadow5 3 года назад +963

    My dad raised me in 10 countries with free first class flights, no security checks at airports, powerful diplomatic passports, the best schools, no taxes anywhere and more. All from being a stenographer in international relations.

    • @strawberrymilk113
      @strawberrymilk113 3 года назад +310

      Is your dad looking to adopt?

    • @zee166
      @zee166 3 года назад +70

      @@strawberrymilk113 lmaooo yes pls adopt us

    • @rosegold973
      @rosegold973 3 года назад +41

      @@strawberrymilk113 right? Don’t forget me u guys I wanna come too 😩

    • @raquel548
      @raquel548 3 года назад +65

      Sooo do I just need a degree in International Relations with a minor in stenography? Im trying to live that good life😅

    • @keepsmiling5937
      @keepsmiling5937 3 года назад +65

      Hello, I'm your long lost brother

  • @jeaninnalexis4318
    @jeaninnalexis4318 3 года назад +154

    I’m a stenographer!! I love everything steno and I love my job!! You did a great job describing our machine! And you can make great money doing this!!

    • @rosemarycanlapan4206
      @rosemarycanlapan4206 2 года назад +1

      Can I ask you some questions about your job?? I’m interested in transferring to this position in the future but want more information from someone who actually does this for a living.

    • @jeaninnalexis4318
      @jeaninnalexis4318 2 года назад +1

      @@rosemarycanlapan4206 sure! Check out some of my Steno videos and ask away! I promise it’s one of the greatest careers out there!

    • @DBrown-vg1fi
      @DBrown-vg1fi 2 года назад +2

      @@rosemarycanlapan4206 Did you start?

  • @klutzycutie
    @klutzycutie 2 года назад +1

    All respect to stenographers who do this daily and for even trials. Can you imagine trial hearings the length and many people speaking. That’s some skills!

  • @Vinniegret
    @Vinniegret 3 года назад

    That is IMPRESSIVE! Thank you.

  • @castielsgranny4308
    @castielsgranny4308 3 года назад +271

    Wonderful! Now I can see that I probably should’ve learned this. I’m old af. Learned typing in a high school class on a non-electric (don’t get me started) typewriter. There’s a whole system that taught touch typing. Each key was assigned to a certain finger and if you learned it you could type very fast, which was important in the dark ages. At interviews for clerical jobs you took a timed typing test. I got up to 80-85 wpm. Leveled out and stayed 70 wpm for years. Also typed accurately without looking at the keyboard, which was also expected, bc a lot of time you’d be typing up something from a handwritten page. Some older offices were a-holes bc they didn’t want you to use liquid paper (white out), but they got over that. Imagine typing up something you needed copies of before copiers were invented and made common. We had to use carbon paper. Sometimes you needed 3 copies so you’d have 3 sheets of typing paper and in between them 2 sheets of carbon. That crap smeared all over your hands; we had special cleaner. First office I worked at that had a copier (1976) I nearly cried. THEN, worked someplace that used QUIP. Forerunner of the fax machine. Only took 6 minutes to send an entire page! We were so psyched when we got a new one that only took 4 minutes per page! (1979). Operated a telex machine (it made what they called ticker tape) to send instant messages to customs or govt offices. Just a few years later came the fax (no one would take JUST a fax-it was ok to use as a guide or draft, but didn’t count if it was a legal contract that needed a “real” signature. So glad that changed). Then computers-on desks. Email. Damn! So much easier. You should’ve heard what my mom used in the 40’s-60’s. Not much different than I used in the 70’s! Except electric typewriters.

    • @tarshagraham7099
      @tarshagraham7099 3 года назад +16

      Greetings from Australia 🇦🇺 I also read whole thing - thank you tor the nostalgic trip down memory lane - I remember most of this stuff - my (school aged) children are mystified by the concept of carbon paper and my efforts to teach them touch typing were not great 😊 Also good to hear ‘zed’ instead of ‘zee’ on RUclips.

    • @elvar9165
      @elvar9165 3 года назад +18

      I love the effort you’ve put in to share this amazing story bout your experiences

    • @orye09
      @orye09 3 года назад +11

      So that’s why they’re always banging on those dang typewriters in the background of Mad Men lol

    • @castielsgranny4308
      @castielsgranny4308 3 года назад +4

      @@orye09 oh hells yeah. Beating the keys. Typed letters, etc, was THE way. Getting the USPS. Overnight mail was unheard of. Federal express (FEDEX) started in 73 but you were pretty dang important and swanky to use it.

    • @audreym3908
      @audreym3908 3 года назад +12

      I felt like I read a documentary!

  • @cranekai3504
    @cranekai3504 3 года назад +215

    it seems so complicated

    • @dashkataey1740
      @dashkataey1740 3 года назад +45

      Maybe to uncomplicate it, think of it as a musical instrument. You press different keys at the same time and get different sounds. This is very similar. It would take practice like anything but over time, you would get better at understanding it.

    • @castielsgranny4308
      @castielsgranny4308 3 года назад +2

      Not at all.

    • @ArmoniSloan
      @ArmoniSloan 3 года назад

      I think so too ! Maybe it just takes practice!

    • @loveforeignaccents
      @loveforeignaccents 3 года назад +8

      @@dashkataey1740 Exactly, like a piano.

    • @geninio97
      @geninio97 3 года назад +3

      @@dashkataey1740 the video didnt explain it to me at all because it was a bit too complex, you've explained it perfectly

  • @maryannedelaney
    @maryannedelaney 3 года назад

    I have wanted to know how these machines work for years! Thank you.

  • @Megan-bt9pm
    @Megan-bt9pm 3 года назад

    A relative of mine was training to do this so I knew about this. Still astounds me every time

  • @c.j.williams3948
    @c.j.williams3948 3 года назад +140

    I’ll stick to my regular keyboard halfway through the trial I’d tell the judge “ I haven’t typed a damn thing” lol

  • @aedlzvn
    @aedlzvn 3 года назад +56

    Woah, I didn't even know this thing exist. Stenographers in our country use handwritten shortcuts and translate it by themselves.

    • @echoplots8058
      @echoplots8058 3 года назад

      That's the way I learned it too. In some institutions this is still done with speeches.

  • @KeithPickeringGuy
    @KeithPickeringGuy 3 года назад

    Never realized that TV captions are done the same way but it makes so much sense.

  • @poisoncurls882
    @poisoncurls882 3 года назад

    Thanks! I've always wondered about this.

  • @nathansmith1085
    @nathansmith1085 3 года назад +64

    I have always wondered how this works, and after watching this video twice...I'm still just as confused.

    • @megantholin8705
      @megantholin8705 3 года назад +1

      Sameeeee. I've always been curious about how it works but after watching this I'm 0_0

  • @jennizu6122
    @jennizu6122 3 года назад +77

    *TBH* I didn't even know this career exists until this video came out.

    • @sjchlnz617
      @sjchlnz617 2 года назад

      Me too. I didnt even know that it is needed in the court...

  • @Ellie80681
    @Ellie80681 Год назад

    Starting my classes this week! ❤ thanks

  • @laurahughes1987
    @laurahughes1987 Год назад

    That was fascinating! Thank you so much ❤

  • @RADZIO895
    @RADZIO895 3 года назад +54

    I can type over 225 words per minute as long as every word is "a"

    • @Nicole-rj4xz
      @Nicole-rj4xz 3 года назад +2

      😂

    • @jacobamarjan2325
      @jacobamarjan2325 2 года назад

      Now, what if a type racer who types at over 200WPM learn to use stenograph?

  • @jessicamontanez9634
    @jessicamontanez9634 3 года назад +45

    I clicked on this with complete confidence I was going to understand immediately. I was wrong.

  • @dpeterson157
    @dpeterson157 Год назад

    I always wondered how those things worked, and now I know. Thanks.

  • @nicelady6369
    @nicelady6369 2 месяца назад

    I’ve always been curious about the machine used and the process. I learned Pitman stenography in secretarial school.. a handwritten “shorthand”. That WAS another language and at 70, I can still write in stenography. This, however, is amazing to me. My hats off to court reporters!!

  • @brianbanek4163
    @brianbanek4163 3 года назад +28

    lowkey mindblowing that people can do this and that it's so much faster

    • @Techridr
      @Techridr 4 месяца назад

      Lowkeys are the vowels

  • @ArmoniSloan
    @ArmoniSloan 3 года назад +42

    WAIT OMG I WASN'T READY FOR THIS!! 👁️👄👁️ I ALWAYS THOUGHT THEY TYPED LIKE NORMAL !!

  • @melissastandingbear
    @melissastandingbear 5 месяцев назад +1

    My local court house have these handheld devices that the stenographer holds over her mouth and talks in to transcribe.

  • @godmadesam
    @godmadesam 3 года назад

    Great information! I just learned something new!

  • @bexyPTX
    @bexyPTX 3 года назад +26

    This must take a lot of practice to master. Truly impressed by anyone who can take this on. I zone out way too easily to ever be able to do this.

  • @iamenuj
    @iamenuj 3 года назад +96

    I'm trying to comprehend this at past 1am so I'm just gonna give up and proceed with the cooking video and starve myself.

    • @adambuccaschie9297
      @adambuccaschie9297 3 года назад

      or you should go shave your mustache!

    • @iamenuj
      @iamenuj 3 года назад

      @@adambuccaschie9297 I will look like a girl

    • @adambuccaschie9297
      @adambuccaschie9297 3 года назад

      @@iamenuj are you not? Lol

    • @iamenuj
      @iamenuj 3 года назад

      @@adambuccaschie9297 if I was a girl, I would be offended. Fortuntely, I'm a boy. Yey

  • @HappyMyTime
    @HappyMyTime 3 года назад

    I look at this and I just feel amazed at how far human achievement has come! How cool is this!!

  • @johncortez2009
    @johncortez2009 6 месяцев назад

    I finally got on here to see how this is done always wondered how anyone would be able to do this with so many people talking at the same time very impressive😊

  • @tiffanymjohnston8052
    @tiffanymjohnston8052 3 года назад +19

    Wow, I had no idea that they weren't typing on a regular keyboard!!! Guess I just never thought of it before. I have much respect for them now!

  • @sophieml477
    @sophieml477 3 года назад +37

    These people deserve more recognition in court

    • @Donnybrook10
      @Donnybrook10 2 года назад

      why?

    • @RustedCroaker
      @RustedCroaker Год назад

      Or a longer sentence.

    • @danielebrparish4271
      @danielebrparish4271 Год назад

      The recognition is printed on the paycheck right after the $ symbol.

    • @razmatazz9310
      @razmatazz9310 Год назад

      You want a standing ovation for them after the hearing or something? What a weird comment.

  • @vlusky_husky
    @vlusky_husky 3 года назад

    I first found out about this on Daily dose of Internet. Been wondering how they work ever since.
    And wow... this is something else... Mad respect.

  • @debiaso6352
    @debiaso6352 2 года назад

    I had enough trouble texting with a flip phone let alone doing this! Nice talented work!

  • @creed4308
    @creed4308 3 года назад +10

    My mom was a court stenographer for 30+ years and she just used a yellow pad, pen, and her recorder. Earlier in her work career, they used typewriters and they had to put liquid eraser on their mistakes. They also have their own alphabet which made taking notes easier and faster.

    • @rockulikeahurricane
      @rockulikeahurricane Год назад +1

      Their own alphabet.. lol.. are you referring to shorthand? Lol

  • @alaskacosplay
    @alaskacosplay 3 года назад +17

    I could never do that. If someone is a court reporter back then does this on a typewriter, they’re probably typing 500 strokes a minute if there’s a lot of people speaking

  • @ladyrachel13
    @ladyrachel13 2 года назад +4

    That is awesome. I had an aunt who was court reporter back in the day. It always looked like she was just pecking at the keys. Thanks to this video I know how it works. This is a good skill to learn. Captionists are needed more than people think.

  • @joontanismbangtan2229
    @joontanismbangtan2229 3 года назад +3

    i remember when our first year in steno we used to read loudly as a group on what our teacher wrote on board,we sound like a first grader trying to learn how to read 🙉

  • @Inflake
    @Inflake 3 года назад +15

    Yeah, I would just be the lawyer. If not, I’d be the guy saying “Your honor, I’m not guilty,”

  • @multifandomad107
    @multifandomad107 3 года назад +29

    I’m in court reporting school and I follow her. She does a great job at explaining and I watch her vids when I start to feel unmotivated.

    • @multifandomad107
      @multifandomad107 2 года назад +1

      @@lillypatterson2590 I go to Alfred taste college in NY but I do my program online. They have online and in person options button the in person the stuffs that in person is your prerequisites not real aging to court reporting but you need to take like English, medical terms, etc. the actual court reporting major you’re learning online but when you do in person the teacher is in her office on the floor below to give you advice.

  • @GmonkeyJ777
    @GmonkeyJ777 3 года назад +1

    I want to learn how to do this just because I'm so confused at how it works.

  • @somethingsimple2525
    @somethingsimple2525 Год назад

    This is so cool been watching loads of court room footage recently and wondered what the hell this was

  • @pollydoeslithium
    @pollydoeslithium 3 года назад +57

    When she said zed

    • @blubab89
      @blubab89 3 года назад +15

      The world doesn’t consists of the USA only
      So non-American won’t pronounce it as ‘zee’

    • @johnluujl
      @johnluujl 3 года назад +12

      I think that's how pretty much the entire world says it. Excluding the US of course.

    • @Salma.Salma.Salma.
      @Salma.Salma.Salma. 3 года назад +4

      @@johnluujl The anglophone world*

    • @johnluujl
      @johnluujl 3 года назад +3

      @@Salma.Salma.Salma. and people who've learned the language

    • @lemone9639
      @lemone9639 3 года назад +1

      There's a world outside the US

  • @nllee7051
    @nllee7051 3 года назад +29

    Ohh I just got a profound respect for this job....gurrrrrrl

  • @yangceb5193
    @yangceb5193 3 года назад

    Incredible skills

  • @kulot1272
    @kulot1272 3 года назад

    That's just how modern enchantment table looks like

  • @Chatbundi
    @Chatbundi 3 года назад +6

    This is fascinating! I studied interpreting (translating orally), where you take note while someone speaks and then translate what was said. It is a difficult exercice too. We don’t use stenography because each language has its own structure and focusing too lunch on that would lead to more mistakes during the translation process.

  • @skyeryk3156
    @skyeryk3156 3 года назад +17

    My girl, that’s a whole other language.. I can’t even speak English properly😂 but I really thought court reporters use normal keyboards though ahah

  • @penglingwhisperer3382
    @penglingwhisperer3382 2 года назад

    It looks like similar concept as a brailler. That has 6 keys plus space bar. You press different combos of the keys for each letter, or in more advanced Braille it’s has a kind of shorthand for a lot of sounds. Each letter of the alphabet is a variation of six dots and the keys on the brailler represent these dots. So you essentially are pressing the key for each specific dot. Because your fingers stay on the same keys the whole time it looks similar to the stenograph and I personally find it less movement and feels faster than touch typing.

  • @phil7708
    @phil7708 2 года назад

    That was totally fascinating!! Wow!

  • @pb7199
    @pb7199 3 года назад +4

    wow i didn't realise stenographers had special keyboards! I'm a linguist so when she said one side was for initial consonants and one side was for final consonants i got confused bc there weren't enough keys, but i see that the keyboard is designed so that you don't have to move your fingers as much, thus saving you time between keys and allowing you to type much faster.

    • @ShawnFumo
      @ShawnFumo 2 года назад

      Yeah you get extra consonants by pressing multiple keys at once. It is set up so that the most common letters (R, S, etc) just take one key and less common ones (X, Z) require a combination of keys.

    • @rachaelnatasha8766
      @rachaelnatasha8766 2 года назад

      You are exactly right

  • @diego246
    @diego246 3 года назад +9

    Jennifer : Hello im Jennifer
    Court reporter: HEHRHRO EUPL SKWRETPHTPHEUTPER

    • @gerry7860
      @gerry7860 3 года назад

      you really like this format of commenting huh? another comment of yours with person: hello to everyone is literally above this one lmao

    • @diego246
      @diego246 3 года назад

      @@gerry7860 i literally have other 4 comments bout that, is not like i want likes just only i like the joke :]

  • @astroboy4124
    @astroboy4124 3 года назад

    so that a tech behind realtime caption wow so awesome

  • @jerrypolete5258
    @jerrypolete5258 Год назад

    This is just insane… it’s crazy how people can do this and do it accurate. Crazy. These people deserve their pay 100%!

  • @nicoleloves9483
    @nicoleloves9483 3 года назад +6

    Wow I’ve always been so interested in the one typing in court.

  • @gracekim3186
    @gracekim3186 3 года назад +5

    Going back to serial documentary court trials and stunned by how this is how they type.

  • @OK-ej7fc
    @OK-ej7fc 3 года назад +3

    We don’t “type” on the machine. We “write” on it. 😉

  • @deltableu
    @deltableu 11 месяцев назад

    I'm selected to sit on 5 week trial as a juror, and I was just curious how they typed so fast... I had absolutely no idea that this is the machine they used!! I thought they were just really fast typists on a standard keyboard. this is insane! Much respect for them!

  • @rmannayr2129
    @rmannayr2129 3 года назад +3

    MY BRAIN LITERALLY CAN'T HANDLE THIS!

  • @panchikofan123
    @panchikofan123 3 года назад +4

    Me: keysmashing
    court reporter: *thats so deep*

  • @ruthiemay4799
    @ruthiemay4799 3 года назад

    Very impressive!!! I always wondered what was going on, and now I know!!! 🥰🥰🥰

  • @jesserivas1387
    @jesserivas1387 3 года назад

    That is so cool, I always wondered how it was done.