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The AlpineInker

The AlpineInker

Ken Hinckley's blog exploring the savage frontiers of pen, touch, and mobile devices

The official blog of the InkSeine project at Microsoft Research

JasonJ's InkSanitorium

GottaBeMobile.com forum member JasonJ is a prolific inker. He’s been at the avant-garde of InkSeine for some time now. He’s offered us lots of great feedback and has a flair for illustrating his points. For example, he’d like us to add a sizing tab to make it easier to resize the InkSeine application window. He often uses it like this to make it easier to drag files and links into his notes:

 

Well, you just can’t make the point any better than this. After seeing a posting like that, how could we not do it? We’ll have to change some things to get this to work, but this kind of feedback gets the feature on the task queue for sure J

He’s also argued against using pressure or additional tablet buttons for pen functionality. As researchers, those are the kinds of additional input channels that we sometimes ponder as routes for tablet innovations, but as JasonJ argues so well, a general tablet and stylus interface can’t require those as building blocks:

I still think zany ideas in this vein are worth exploring as options or alternatives. They can make for good research papers, even if they are not suitable for deployment in InkSeine. I also agree with JasonJ that they need to be approached with caution as they can potentially detract from the pure pen and ink experience.  

Another thing JasonJ desperately wants is custom pen and highlighter colors. This is something we’ve been planning to add to InkSeine since well before our initial release, but we haven’t had the opportunity to implement it yet. JasonJ offers another great illustration for how this might work:

This kind of sketch is very interesting for us because it reveals JasonJ’s vocabulary and structure thinking about the task workflow: select the nib type, then select the color. Maybe these could be done as interchangable steps. Even if we don’t follow the exact UI design he’s sketched out, that kind of feedback is really helpful when we are making decisions about how the UI should really work. We do conduct usability tests occasionally to vet our designs and test for problems that we’ve overlooked, but in my experience such tests usually aren’t very helpful to come up with a good design in the first place. But sketches like this from a person who is really using the software to do stuff out there in the really world certainly do!

Jason also has some fun with InkSeine. He experimented with the custom page backgrounds download that we posted. He thought it would be cool to take it one step further and show the pages flipping. Now wouldn’t that be cool?!?

One JasonJ sketch even made the front page of GottaBeMobile. He likes to put hyperlinks to folders and applications in his notebooks so that he can quickly launch them while sketching out his thoughts and taking notes on his ideas. I do this all the time with InkSeine myself – it’s great for things that you use frequently in the context of a project or topic in your notes that you revisit from time to time – but I have to say that JasonJ’s version just looks cooler and more fun than my own versions of these:

Putting them in the canted gold picture frame lends them a wonderful touch of class and personality. It’s certainly more fun to work this way with a tablet than to pull down some soulless drop-down menu with a monotonous list of textual favorites.

JasonJ also kindly sent me a selection of some of the cool note pages that he’s generated in the course of his daily work. This stuff is like solid gold to us – it really shows us what someone is doing with our tool on a daily basis. Even when people write to us that they like InkSeine or that they are using certain features to do fun stuff, we rarely get to see what really happens in those secret journals. This gets us excited all over again about great software for inking on a Tablet PC. It also gets us thinking about more stuff we could do to make this kind of usage more fluid and more expressive by adding new capabilities or by simplifying the program.

JasonJ’s notes are just beautiful and a lot of fun, so I’ll let this selection of pages from the highlights file he sent me speak for themselves:

 

 

 

 

 The final page of this particular notebook is a sketch that JasonJ did that shows how a feature for summing lists of numbers might work in InkSeine. I’m not sure if this is a feature that we will have the cycles to implement, but I love the design he sketches for how it could work. In fact, I often do exactly this sort of ink-plus-screen-capture mashup to sketch out my own ideas for InkSeine (and other projects). It’s a great way to lay it out there and see if the idea really could work, or if it has problems that weren’t obvious at first.

Any way you add it up, JasonJ’s InkSanitorium shows how InkSeine can a fun, productive, and eye-grabbing way to hash out your ideas.

 

Comments

 

feralboy said:

Jason's pages are definitely interesting. My own use of InkSeine is much less visual and monochromatic. Definitely a reflection of my personality. Seeing his pages makes me want to break out of my self-imposed creative prison. Good Stuff!

June 4, 2008 10:27 PM
 

Ken Hinckley said:

Yes, Jason's way of working is beautiful, isn't it?  

I like your "monochromatic missives" though, too. If you want to send me a few PG-rated pages that you wouldn't mind sharing, maybe I can work them into a follow-up post some time :-)

Ken

June 5, 2008 2:53 PM
 

feralboy said:

Oh yeah, Jason's stuff is beautiful to look at ... and so is yours, by the way. I've enjoyed the hell out of looking at your creative uses for the tool and enjoyed your artistic implementations. As powerful a tool as InkSeine is in it's current state, it's definitely the product of a creative soul...and it just makes you want to stretch your own creative legs when using it. I would guess that artists are among it's most ardent users -- that's not a limitation, in my mind, but a huge compliment, as the tool gets out of the way and just lets you create. My current use is purely as a writers notebook...and a place to jot down ideas for jewlery projects (dabbling with PMC - an amazing silver clay that fires to 99.7% silver).

Thanks for the offer to display some of my PG-rated pages, but honestly, I have no idea how to reign-in my thoughts or rate them when I'm creating for creation's sake (: Which is what I'm usually up to in InkSeine.

Okay, gotta run...I need to ink some ideas in InkSeine before they unravel in the light of day!

June 6, 2008 1:16 PM
 

Ken Hinckley said:

I hear ya. If the application is being used to ink secret personal treasures, then perhaps that is the greatest possible compliment I could hope for :-)

I'll look forward to seeing a short story or somesuch over on your blog one of these days. I also use InkSeine for writing occasionally. For some reason I am fond of jotting down short story fragments and ideas, and I then proceed to do absolutely nothing with them.

June 6, 2008 2:38 PM