Lyndsay Williams of Microsoft Research's Cambridge UK lab is the
inventor of the Smartquill,a pen that can remember the words that it is
used to write, and then transform them into computer text . The idea
that "it would be neat to put all of a handheld-PDA type computer in a
pen," came to the inventor in her sleep . “It’s the pen for the new
millennium,†she says. Encouraged by Nigel Ballard, a leading
consultant to the mobile computer industry,
Williams took her prototype to the British Telecommunications Research Lab, where she was promptly hired and given money and institutional support for her project. The prototype, called SmartQuil, has been developed by world-leading research laboratories run by BT (formerly British Telecom) at Martlesham, eastern England. It is claimed to be the biggest revolution in handwriting since the invention of the pen.
SmartQuill contains sensors that record movement by using the earth's gravity system, irrespective of the platform used. The pen records the information inserted by the user. Your words of wisdom can also be uploaded to your PC through the “digital inkwellâ€, while the files that you might want to view on the pen are downloaded to SmartQuill as well.
Williams took her prototype to the British Telecommunications Research Lab, where she was promptly hired and given money and institutional support for her project. The prototype, called SmartQuil, has been developed by world-leading research laboratories run by BT (formerly British Telecom) at Martlesham, eastern England. It is claimed to be the biggest revolution in handwriting since the invention of the pen.
SmartQuill contains sensors that record movement by using the earth's gravity system, irrespective of the platform used. The pen records the information inserted by the user. Your words of wisdom can also be uploaded to your PC through the “digital inkwellâ€, while the files that you might want to view on the pen are downloaded to SmartQuill as well.
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