@@Sacred_Samurai Aerick has a video where he sets up basic bindings for Minecraft. You could probably utilize the Polyglot for most efficient gaming on steno.
pausing and reading what he is actually typing is hysterical. "Yes, I remember seeming the why am coming three or four months ago aliens for it the little boy and I know it that I couldn't go any knot left and right and you know to the try to avoid North Dakota collision my thoughts were Xu to do."
I'm guessing it's not going away as fast as people think. This is pretty clear audio, despite being sped up a lot, and people don't have thick accents, on most videos I watch there are some really ridiculous errors in the automated captions. Whenever I hear something I can't quite understand (English is not my native language) the caption is completely useless and I have to go back and listen again to try to understand.
Cool little gadgets, a bit expensive though. You can learn the theory on your own and there are cheaper options out there based on NKRO enabled keyboards if you want to learn it as a hobby using a free software like Plover. Still requires 6 to 24 months to get good at it, depending on how much effort you put into it.
my favorite thing about this is turning on the auto generated english captions perfectly matching the words, besides the one mistake at 1:00 where "your airbags deploy as" got captioned as "your bugs be played as"
Well, you can hear why it happened. The second a in airbags was the reason. Still though, it's impressive. Google Docs has a speech to text function and it's just as, if not more accurate than RU-vid's auto captions. But since the video is being stored somewhere and the captions are usually unavailable right after the video uploads, there's time for more accurate speech to text recognition.
I counted, and my current theory would require 80 strokes for the second passage, for a total of 4.1 strokes per second. Not impossible, but I'm still learning my theory and it would take me a few more years to get to the point that I could write this literary even at 3/4 speed. Marco Rubio really is something else.
It's funny Mark mentioned going to homeschool conventions. I'm currently relearning theory online in his school (after spending 5 years in a write-it-out theory at a school that closed down)... but I'm starting over several years later while being married and homeschooling two kiddos. I hope my daughter will show interest in court reporting by the time she hits high school. *fingers crossed* She's only in 4th grade, but she's a piano player, so you never know😅 It gets SO crazy finding the time to practice writing, but Emma's story is VERY encouraging❤
I could not even follow the source half the time, so that's already a massive feat to even understand spoken text at this speed. I think I could speed read at 370 wpm but listening, let alone typing, that's awesome.
They could calculate that way, but here the rule is "effective speed with at least 95% accuracy" so you don't get penalized for being closer to 95% than to 100%.
In a way there should be no errors, it's meant for court reporting so does it really matter how fast you go if you can't rely on the integrity of what's written? 150wpm with no mistakes is useful, 300wpm but you may have a few totally nonsensical sentences is actually useless. I only watched for a few seconds and saw so many massive mistakes.
@@Kiowan918Not all stenography is meant for court reporting, it's just the most well associated application. Since this is a speed showcase, not actual court stenography, there's no reason why zero errors should be tolerated.
Joe is very Hard Working Man. I'm Surprised because he completed his steno course within 15 months. And he spend 9 hours in one week for this. Shocking, Amazing, Its like, he didn't waste time to drink, Milk, nor he waste time to eat curd, He only took the cream of the milk and he had all sorces of protien which we can take by milk. I'm very encouraged by you, and want to become like you. Hats off for your efforts. Well done Brother.
My homeschooled freshman started Magnum Steno last year. There was a booth at our state's homeschool convention in the exhibit hall "recruiting" for court reporting. Definitely a great untapped resource!
this makes a lot more sense than teaching stroke heavy theories. not only do your hands have to move much faster at all times, but I would imagine the cognitive workload is much higher as well.
"I wouldn't think," SKWHOUFRPBG. I=SKWH; Wouldn't = OU; think = FRPBG. One stroke. I can't = SKWHA; I couldn't = SKWHAO; I didn't = SKWHEU; I don't = SKWHO; I shouldn't = SKWHU; I won't = SKWHOE; I wouldn't = SKWHOU; then add on your endings. You = SKPR. "You wouldn't think so." SKPROUFRPBGS, one stroke. I don't use the Y - KWR - like most because I found I have better uses for it. Thank you, Mark, for all your help over the years!
Eminem be like : " Now I'm 'bout to fool again This tune is sick, it's luminous, the moon is lit A freakin' lunatic, a human computer chip And I'm soon to stick a broom in the uterus of your Hooters chick If I was you, I wouldn't do nothin' stupid due to the mood I'm in I'm losin' it, you get chewed like a Junior Mint Show me who to rip, it's time for you to get screwed Empty the lubricant and put super glue in it ! "
... What? I don't understand what your intention was, here. Are those actual lyrics or AI-generated ones? More importantly - _why_ A couple of those are some frickin great bars, also - Blown away, but just confused as shit