AAC products that are now focused on Morse as an input method are limited but products such as the Tandem Master and the Darci USB exist to fill the void. These devices aid people who are familiar with Morse as they act as a Keyboard/Mouse for any PC. Using text to speech software it’s then fairly straightforward to “type” with Morse and get the text to speech software to speak. Most recently Google has taken up Tania’s TandemMaster and released Morse as an input method on their GBoard app for Android and iOS (Read some instructions on getting this working here) But what if you are new to morse?
To add to these resources we wanted to make a smoother transition to devices such as GBoard or the Tandem Master. Something that allowed a user to use the same codeset – and deals with prediction – which significantly speeds up writing (as shown with GBoard). But also – we wanted something that gave the user more immediate feedback as to what they are typing. MorseWriter was envisaged to do this by giving a visual indicator of the keys that can be activated by greying out keys.
For example. Lets type “Hello” (NB: We have prediction turned off in this video)
Notice how the letters are greyed out depending on the next possible Morse code that you can use. We hope that over time this will help with typing with Morse.
Other features supported:
Full Keyboard and Mouse access across the computer
Supports one switch Morse, Two switch or three switches
Can be resized and remembers the location. A config screen starts up the first time its run and then doesn’t show unless the user access it in the taskbar (this has been vital when we leave it with clients for a long period of time and don’t have great access to the screen)