Friday, November 20, 2009

About Those Bilingual Keyboards on Laptops


I absolutely hate them.

My old laptop is starting to crap out (I get the BSOD on a regular basis now) and the new Logos 4 is a resource hog, so now is a good time for me to buy a new laptop.

The problem is that all laptops in Canada seem to come with these new international/bilingual/multilingual keyboards. As a touch typist, I'm used to a standard US-English keyboard layout, but the stores in Canada are filled with laptops that have the bilingual keyboards with the funny shaped ENTER key that's too far to the right, and the tiny LEFT SHIFT key that's too far to the left.

I've tried these keyboards on my friends' laptops, as well as on in-store demo models, and they are a real pain in the ass to type on. I'm forever missing the left shift key and hitting the key to the right of it by mistake, and the enter key is almost impossible to hit correctly without looking down at it.

Aside from the usual compromises made on laptop keyboards due to lack of space, there are other quirks related to the need for extra keys (mostly for accented vowels). Often they'll shift punctuation marks to a different place on the keyboard, meaning you have to hunt and peck to find them.

The thing is, I don't understand why computer companies feel the need to send laptops with these crappy keyboards to English Canada. Are they just trying to save costs by shipping the same type of keyboards to all of Canada, instead of sending separate keyboards to Quebec and the rest of Canada? Is this the result of some new law by the language police in Quebec?

Whatever the reason, it appears to have been a recent development. Last year, I can remember visiting Future Shop or Best Buy and finding plenty of laptops with the regular US keyboards. Now I can't find any.

Looks like I'll be making a trip across the border for a new laptop.

Monday, November 16, 2009

Parsed Texts on the iPhone and iPod Touch

Olive Tree is now offering parsed versions of the BHS, Mounce's Greek New Testament, and the LXX. All you have to do is download the free Bible Reader app and you can purchase and download the various parsed texts into it. At the moment it is quite pricey (BHS $70; GNT $60; LXX $75), but Olive Tree will undoubtedly put together some sort of package deal in the near future.

I've been using Olive Tree's app for quite a while as a beta tester, and I must say that its functionality is really top notch. In my opinion, it's the best bible app out there.