Coding English: Using 5 or fewer keys to write the 4,000 most frequent words with Plover steno

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 23 авг 2019
  • With Plover steno and a set of custom outlines, I am able to write the top 4,000 root words in English in just 5 keypresses or less-and the top 1,000 root words in just 4 keypresses or less. This video shows how steno makes this possible! (For more information on this process, visit my ROPE page on GitHub: github.com/kburchfiel/rope
    You can follow me on Twitch to watch me race on TypeRacer using Plover steno at / kburchfiel
    For similar videos, visit my Plover Steno, Typing, and Keyboards playlist! • Plover Steno, Typing, ...
    Links to Plover learning tools and more information:
    My video explaining Plover: • Typing in Plover, a Fr...
    How to download and start using Plover: github.com/openstenoproject/p...
    Learn Plover! (An excellent beginners' resource, and the site I used to learn the fundamentals of Plover): sites.google.com/site/ploverd...
    Plover Discord (very active and helpful community): / discord
    More learning resources: github.com/openstenoproject/p...
    ROPE (A resource I created to help you learn and remember outlines for ~4,200 common English words) : github.com/kburchfiel/rope
    Video explaining ROPE: • ROPE: How I learn and ...
    Source for the original frequency list and frequency stats:
    These words and frequency statistics come from the New General Service List Website (www.newgeneralservicelist.org/ ) (Browne, C., Culligan, B., and Phillips, J). The "NGSL Stats & Frequencies to 34K" list was the main source of words and is available at www.newgeneralservicelist.org/... .
    Citations for the NGSL, which also contributed material for this list:
    Browne, C., Culligan, B. & Phillips, J. (2013). The New General Service List. Retrieved from www.newgeneralservicelist.org.
    Citation for the NAWL, which some of the words in this list belong to:
    Browne, C., Culligan, B. & Phillips, J. (2013). The New Academic Word List. Retrieved from www.newgeneralservicelist.org.
    (Music in the video:
    1. Cologne 1983 by Joe Kirsch/Media Right Productions
    2. Wild Pogo by Francis Preve
    3. Mountain Jump by Coyote Hearing
    Source: RUclips audio library: / audiolibrary )

Комментарии • 9

  • @candlespotlight
    @candlespotlight 2 года назад +1

    You are INCREDIBLE!

  • @skipinkoreaable
    @skipinkoreaable 3 года назад +3

    Brilliant.

  • @terrythompson7535
    @terrythompson7535 3 года назад +2

    This is the future. I see all these kids who can type 200 wpm minute and it is clearly exhausting to them.. taking entirely too much energy, effort and focus. It's clear that it will be much easier to use this tool to accomplish similar, the same, or even greater results.

  • @stoicsoul8473
    @stoicsoul8473 3 года назад +5

    How did you modify your keyboard for this?

    • @SylvieTheBagel
      @SylvieTheBagel 2 года назад +2

      It's not modded at all- software called Plover does it all.

  • @kisdejawatchers8443
    @kisdejawatchers8443 4 года назад +3

    how do you add ROPE to plover dictionaries I can't even figure out how add indivdual words yet, I try to edit json and the words won't work like my signature, I'm obviously not understanding how this works

    • @KBurchfiel
      @KBurchfiel  4 года назад +2

      Hi kisdeja, happy to help. When you download all the ROPE materials, one of those materials will be the dictionary, which is meant to serve as an addition to the regular Plover dictionary. You would then want to open Plover, choose to add a dictionary, and then find the ROPE dictionary (maybe in your Downloads folder). If you have any trouble with adding dictionaries, the folks in the Plover Discord ( discordapp.com/invite/0lQde43a6dGmAMp2 ) should be able to help! Thanks for watching!

  • @SylvieTheBagel
    @SylvieTheBagel 2 года назад

    How fast are you now?

  • @StellaCarey
    @StellaCarey 4 года назад +1

    How fast are you now?