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Comments on: The iPhone learns to read

520 eh? 

Posted Thursday 17th April 2008 07:51 GMT

Go

Sweary is it? Can anyone expand on that?

520 in Mandarin 

Posted Thursday 17th April 2008 08:11 GMT

Heart

Actually no, in Mandarin it sounds very much like "I love you".

Um, the Chinese don't just exist in China... 

Posted Thursday 17th April 2008 08:18 GMT

There might, you know, be a few living in the US and every where else, along with Japanese, Koreans, Thai's, etc. Some of them might even have iPhones if you can believe it!

520 means... 

Posted Thursday 17th April 2008 08:22 GMT

"the numbers 520 in Chinese ("wu er ling") sound like the words for "I love you" ("wo ai ni")."

Re: 520 eh? 

Posted Thursday 17th April 2008 08:26 GMT

Heart

520 is spoken wu er ling

"wu er ling" sounds a little like "wo ai ni"

"wo ai ni" means "I love you"

Not sweary, but not something one would normally send to a colleague.

/resident chinaman

p910i 

Posted Thursday 17th April 2008 08:54 GMT

Heart

one of the reasons i hung onto my p910i for over 2 years (before switching to the iphone) was because of this very feature... i can't see myself using any other phone now.

Wow...! 

Posted Thursday 17th April 2008 10:04 GMT

Dead Vulture

...almost makes me want to go back 4 years in time, not buy my sony p800 (and eventually my p900, p910, m600 & p1i), drive 200 miles to london and setup a three and a half year camp outside the apple store just so i can get my hands on this epically groundbreaking tech!

Not the first time an Apple device does handwriting recognition... 

Posted Thursday 17th April 2008 11:00 GMT

Coat

Hope it's better than their earlier attempt... Cue one of my favourite jokes...

Q) How many Apple Newton owners does it take to change a light bulb?

A) Faux! Their to eat lemons, axe gravy soup.

Sorry, it's the one with the Motorola 8500 in the pocket.

It's funky, but.. 

Posted Thursday 17th April 2008 12:21 GMT

Is there a real use for it? I can see the use for chinese, but I can't see the use for english - you'll be using a finger so you'll probably draw each letter quite big for it to be recognised, and from previous use of tablet PCs they're usually quite slow. Once you get used to typing with the iPhone you can usually be quite fast - three finger typing is about as fast as normal typing on a full keyboard. Surely it'll be awful for passwords as well - if you can see what you're typing so can everyone else, but if you can't then how do you know it's doing it right?

Well done to the guys that developed it - I just can't see much of a use for it.

Such a fantastic phone with all these (missing) features 

Posted Thursday 17th April 2008 12:31 GMT

Wow, for a phone that gets so much hype, it sure it missing a lot of standard features found on several other phones (basically any Windows Mobile phone for starters) for years!

mmm yes 

Posted Thursday 17th April 2008 12:56 GMT

such an important feature that no one mentioned it was missing until this guy made it, i can't say I lost any sleep over it, then again I don't whinge like a little bitch about it being too expensive not 3g and lacking a 100 megapixel camera I'd never use

at AC 

Posted Thursday 17th April 2008 12:58 GMT

Heart

Don't think something that recognises Chinese character will be much use to the Japanese, korens, Thais etc unless they are learning to write Chinese.

Japan alone has three styles of writting (Kanji, the closest to Chinese, katakana & hiragana, oh and don't forget the unofficial romaji).

@Stu Reeves 

Posted Thursday 17th April 2008 13:27 GMT

Once you have handwriting recognition capability for hanzi, then spotting japanese, korean, thai, even arabic characters is a simple change. Start with the most complicated first, yes?

If you don't use that, then sending 520 is to your girlfriend is good, sending 5201314 is better. But sending 748 to anyone is very very bad.

Newton 

Posted Thursday 17th April 2008 17:35 GMT

Boffin

Hm. I wasn't paying attention to the iPhone. I thought it already did handwriting.

My experience of the Newton was that a) I couldn't afford it, and b) it could read *my* handwriting. All these people who complained about the Newton must have been really scruffy writers. They probably got "sp. See me" in red in the margin all the time at school.

@Steve Evans 

Posted Thursday 17th April 2008 22:38 GMT

LOL

Been so long since I played with a Newton I'd forgotten how 'good' the recognition was :)

iphone dosn't forward texts 

Posted Friday 18th April 2008 10:06 GMT

Unhappy

While we are on the iphone wagon - I cannot forward the texts I receive on it.

What? 748? 

Posted Friday 18th April 2008 13:37 GMT

Please put me out of my misery.

"If you don't use that, then sending 520 is to your girlfriend is good, sending 5201314 is better. But sending 748 to anyone is very very bad."

5201314

748

I need to know.

oops 

Posted Friday 18th April 2008 14:58 GMT

Stop

Forgot the translations:

5201314 (wu er ling yi san yi si) is like (wo ai ni yi sheng yi shi) meaning "I love you forever" while 748 (qi si ba) sounds like "qu si ba" which is the Chinese for "go and die".

881!

Ah, number stuff with the Chinese 

Posted Friday 18th April 2008 23:57 GMT

They avoid any instances for the number 4 as it sounds like "death". Ironically, one of the "best luck" numbers is 666 ;)

There are some articles on the 'net and/or Wikipedia that talk about this particular custom.

As a former Palm and HP Jornada PocketPC user, I don't think of using a "finger-based" handwrite recognition system in the near future ... stylus-based was bad enough!

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