1. That's it? Why is it written like that?

  2. I think it was black and white too.

  3. I recently hurt my hands and I can't spend as much time writing with pen and paper as I use to. Any tools for performing repetitive math operations like long multiplication of larger numbers without all the writing?

  4. OP please let me know if you find one.

  5. I found Voice Access. It's an accessibility app by Google. I've been having mixed results with it. As with most speech to text, it doesn't pick up everything with lazer accuracy, including the commands. Maybe I'm not speaking loud enough, or clearly. It's an improvement, however.

  6. I have no preference. It can be a standalone app or an app that triggers another app. I just don't know what app can do this.

  7. I guess because the initial words are rather uncommon, I had a hard time guessing the vowels and reading this. Looks like you did a perfect job of translating into Yash, except maybe for the subjective choice of how many vowels to include (meaning maybe I need more than you). (I’ve been ignoring typable systems these days, and this sample gives me a new respect for the work in reading them, and a new appreciation of the value of symbols over contraction.)

  8. I figure that as I write more Yash, I'll just get use to the lack of vowels. Maybe...

  9. Hmmm, maybe. Teeline’s lack of vowels is definitely one of the things users complain about “not being able to read,” even sometimes saying “TeeLine was only ever designed to aid the memory for a couple hours between interview and transcription. After that time, after your memory fades, it’s hopelessly ambiguous.” (Of course, just like with Fake Amazon Reviews, you can never be sure if the criticism comes from an actual TeeLine user, or the PR arm of competing systems!)

  10. As for Yublin, I believe you just write the other words in longhand.

  11. very good this weeh, just a small correction launch uses the sh form rather than j, j is the sound for the dge in judge, so I'd probably just go for lonc - and since we already have a rather short contraction of anonymous that is commonly use I'd probably just go for anon there :)

  12. I see. Thanks for the feedback!

  13. Some pointers this week again, here's my rendition of it: ybz va ut salv yru - Rbt Frz

  14. Thanks for the feedback! Looking forward to next week's quote.

  15. By including the longhand, this is such a great demo of the compression of yash!

  16. I didn't quite catch the phonetic principle when I read the yash site the first few times. I should re-read it again eventually.

  17. So cool! It’s been a while since we’ve seen Yash. 8-)

  18. It's nice. The ruleset is tiny, so I anticipate being able to use it in day to day personal writing significantly sooner than something like Pre-Anniversary Gregg or Speedwriting...

  19. Hi and thanks for trying out yash, here are some corrections, instead of using io for you, use u, and for the - tion ending c is enough, so the whole quote would be : ur xr x blgc tb ysm prsn u vr 5m ag

  20. I see. Thanks for the input! I'll keep these in mind as I write more.

  21. Some of your circle vowels are going the wrong direction, and so implying Rs that aren’t there. Like attack in the last one.

  22. I did notice myself writing the vowels in the wrong direction the next day, when I stumbled across "lady" in my Anki deck. I got all the sounds right, but the long E was counterclockwise like my long A.

  23. I'm not a Gregger but I heard alarm bells about writing a wrong outline several times in practice - you will just get better and quicker at writing that wrong outline instead of the correct one. These can end up being thorns in your side, stones in your shoe, in future, if not firmly dealt with right from the beginning. The quickest way to practise is to copy directly from the book exercises in the chapter you are on, as it is all correct and perfectly formed. Write them neatly with several spare lines underneath each line of shorthand, and then fill in the blank lines, aiming for smoother writing than your initial preparation. It might also be helpful to trace over your neat version several times very lightly in pencil first, to get maximum use out of the pages and more practice in smooth hand movements, without errors creeping in. This gets all the outlines learned, before repeating the passage, where you are writing shorthand from text or speech and so having to recall rather than copy.

  24. I see. I will keep this in mind. Thanks!

  25. I've been dabbling in HTML, CSS, Javascript, and PHP for years and I decided that I need to stop dabbling and master some of these. I also decided that I want to freelance, and do my job very well. Right now I am running back through HTML and CSS and (imho) mastering them via understanding the concepts and memorizing them (in Anki, currently doing this with Flexbox). I basically want do subcontract work for anyone who has a website design and wants it become code. I'd say anything (.png, .psd, .sketch, etc.) to HTML is what I'd would like to do for now. Are people and agencies still working with freelancers for this kind of work? Is there room for me? Do I need to wait until I have intermediate JavaScript, jQuery, and (ReactJS/VueJS/whatever) experience to even get work on the front-end? Most random artcles I bump into only talk about front-end work for web apps and not front-end work for business/marketing websites. I intend on developing my JS skills as much as I can, but I would rather not wait to pursue work if I don't have to. I also plan to learn all I can about things like loading speed optimization and web accessibility.

  26. I've been dabbling in HTML, CSS, Javascript, and PHP for years and I decided that I need to stop dabbling and master some of these. I also decided that I want to freelance, and do my job very well. Right now I am running back through HTML and CSS and (imho) mastering them via understanding the concepts and memorizing them (in Anki, currently doing this with Flexbox). I basically want do subcontract work for anyone who has a website design and wants it become code. I'd say anything (.png, .psd, .sketch, etc.) to HTML is what I'd would like to do for now. Are people and agencies still working with freelancers for this kind of work? Is there room for me? Do I need to wait until I have intermediate JavaScript, jQuery, and (ReactJS/VueJS/whatever) experience to even get work on the front-end? Most random artcles I bump into only talk about front-end work for web apps and not front-end work for business/marketing websites. I intend on developing my JS skills as much as I can, but I would rather not wait to pursue work if I don't have to. I also plan to learn all I can about things like loading speed optimization and web accessibility.

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