Not Applicable
This invention relates to an apparatus for providing alphanumeric input to computers and other electronic devices by means of operating four keys by four fingers of one hand.
A number of attempts to design a portable keyboard operated by one hand have been described in the prior art, but none of these seem to have been very successful. The reason is that the fingers and the thumb of one hand cannot really be used to hold AND to operate the keyboard at the same time.
To resolve this issue the keyboard must be held or attached to the hand (or to another part of the body) by some sort of harness, frame or some other attachment device. For example, see U.S. Pat. No. 6,429,854.
The problem with these attempts is that they make the keyboard large, awkward to use and cumbersome to operate, defeating the purpose of a truly portable device.
The present invention solves this problem by clearly separating the functions of operating the keys and holding the device, which is further separated into holding the device in place, and providing support against the keys being pressed:
This approach allows the present invention to be made of only two small parts: a base with a row of four keys, and a thumb receptacle attached to the base on one side (on the left for a right-handed keyboard; on the right side of the base of a left-handed keyboard).
The invention describes a device for generating alphanumeric characters as input to electronic devices—a miniature computer keyboard with only four keys operated by one hand.
The keyboard has two parts. The first part is a small base with four keys arranged in a row, one for each of the four fingers. The second part is an adjustable pouch or receptacle large enough to fit the thumb of the hand operating the keyboard. The two parts are attached in such a way that when the thumb is inserted in the pouch, the four fingers of the hand fall comfortably on the four keys, with the hand in a natural, relaxed position.
While the keyboard is being operated, the thumb is inserted in the receptacle and holds the keyboard in position, with the four fingers resting each on its own key, preventing the keyboard from moving out of place. Support against the fingers pressing the keys is provided by resting the device against another object, like a table, an armrest, the operator's own body or pocket, or any other suitable object.
The keyboard could be connected to the electronic device receiving the input by a cable (such as USB cable). However in the preferred embodiment the connection would be via Bluetooth or other wireless means, providing much greater flexibility and ease of use, especially with mobile devices.
All the alphanumeric, control and special characters are generated by pressing the four keys using composite keystrokes, as described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,952,173.
Not Applicable
The preferred embodiment of the invention has two parts:
The thumb receptacle is attached to one side of the key base—to the left side of a right-hand keyboard, to the right side in case of a left-hand keyboard. The thumb receptacle and the base with the four keys are arranged in an approximately right angle (or slightly less), so that when the thumb is inserted in the receptacle the tips of the four fingers are positioned above the four keys, while the hand is held in a natural, relaxed position. The two parts may be joined permanently or using an adjustable joint, which would help adjusting the position of the keys in relation to the thumb for hands of different sizes.
The joint may also allow adjusting the angle between the thumb receptacle and the key base to such a degree so as to allow turning the key base all the way (180 degrees) to the other side—thus making the same device usable by either right or left hand.
While the keyboard is being operated, the thumb inserted in the receptacle holds the keyboard in position, the four fingers resting each on its own key, preventing the keyboard from moving sideways. Support against the fingers depressing the keys is provided by resting the device against another object—the operator's own body or pocket, table, armrest of a chair—anything that the hand can normally rest on.
Each of the four fingers has its own dedicated key. The fingers only need to depress and release the keys; there is never any need to move them away or from key to key.
Although the fact that another object is required to support the keyboard while it is used may seem as a disadvantage at first, in reality it is not. Even when standing or walking, it is more comfortable to operate a one-handed keyboard while the hand is resting against the side of one's body or in his/her pocket. On the other hand, the fact that the keyboard is attached to the hand solely by inserting the thumb and no other ‘harnesses’, gloves or other awkward attachment devices are required permits the extreme miniaturization of the keyboard, making it ideal for portable devices and wearable computing. Plus it makes it that much easier to operate: just slip it on your thumb, do the typing and slip it off. And you can do that without taking your hand out of your pocket.
The four keys are used to generate all the alphanumeric characters plus any required control and special characters by utilizing the so called composite keystrokes, as described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,952,173.