Showing posts with label Graffiti Fonts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Graffiti Fonts. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Gothic Alphabet for Graffiti

Gothic Alphabet for GraffitiThis is the type of Gothic Alphabet good for graffiti. Actually, many types of letters are great for graffiti but i think this is one pretty fonts for a graffiti.

via

Thursday, April 8, 2010

Harry Potter Fonts

harry potter fonts
Before I've posted about Harry Potter Graffiti , Now i want to show about Harry Potter Fonts . harry potter font has a specific characteristic, the font is like lightning at the end.Enjoy the Harry Potter Fonts.

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

ABCD - Graffiti Fonts

graffiti fontsGraffiti fonts of this picture is beautiful art graffiti from Transit Hooli. and i share again in this blog. The graffiti for your collection fonts style. I think this blue graffiti fonts is really cool, how do you think?

Thursday, March 4, 2010

Graffiti Tag Font

graffiti tag font
Here's graffiti tag font made with digital style. The graffiti looks very beautiful with contrast white colors. I like the graffiti tag font, How about you?If you interested you could comment the graffiti.
[via]

Saturday, September 12, 2009

Graffiti Alphabet - New Version Palm Graffiti Alphabet

graffiti alphabet,palm graffiti alphabet
Graffiti alphabet above is new graffiti alphabet from Palm before i was explain about old graffiti from palm. Graffiti alphabet above is new version because in April 1997 Xerox had sued PalmSource, Inc. over its use of Graffiti. You can read about graffiti alphabet palm.

Below Explain About New Graffiti Alphabet Palm (OS) :

Graffiti 2 is a new version of the Palm OS handwriting system, Graffiti, that was introduced in 2003. In January of that year PalmSource announced the change and explained that Graffiti 2 was based on CIC’s Jot and would replace the "old" (original) version of Graffiti. Graffiti 2 debuted in Palm OS 4.1.2 for Motorola DragonBall-based handhelds and Palm OS 5.2 for ARM-based ones.

The primary reason for the change was the fact that in April 1997 Xerox had sued PalmSource, Inc. over its use of Graffiti. After a legal fight lasting a number of years, and despite the dismissal of the case by a federal judge, Xerox won a reversal late in 2001 in the U.S. Court of Appeals.

As part of their press for the new handwriting recognition system, PalmSource argued that Jot and Graffiti 2 more closely followed the standard ways of drawing letters and numbers than the original Graffiti did; and they also argued that lowering the learning curve would attract more new users to the platform. But the move alienated many long-time Palm users, who were quite happy with the previous version of Graffiti, which they claimed was much easier to use (though perhaps not to learn).

The most prominent issue involved was the number of stylus strokes required to execute a character. The original Graffiti recognition software required only a single stylus stroke for almost every alphanumeric character. Graffiti 2, however, required the user to execute two strokes in order to create many commonly used characters. This was seen as a lot of extra work, especially considering "i" and "t" were two of the characters affected.

Eventually a "hack" circulated among Palm power users that allowed them to force the OS on their Palms to revert to the old version of Graffiti. This was a simple file copy until the most recent versions of Palm OS, which require hacked Graffiti libraries to be used, which lack a function used in the Blazer web browser, causing some text entry performed via this application to crash the handheld. The hack does, however, work with all other applications flawlessly.

source : wikipedia

Graffiti Alphabet - Palm Graffiti Gestures

graffiti alphabet
Graffiti Alphabet Above is Sistem from Palm Os used in PDAs, You can See and know Graffiti alphabet above is a software symbolisme was originally written by Palm, Inc.

Below is explain about graffiti alphabet from Palm (OS) :

Graffiti is the handwriting recognition software used in PDAs based on the Palm OS. Graffiti was originally written by Palm, Inc. as the recognition system for GEOS-based devices such as HP's OmniGo 120 or the Magic Cap-line and was available as an alternate recognition system for the Apple Newton MessagePad, when NewtonOS 1.0 couldn't recognize handwriting very well. Graffiti also runs on the Windows Mobile platform, where it is called "Block Recognizer", and on the Symbian UIQ platform as the default recognizer and was available for Casio's Zoomer PDA.
Gestures used by original Palm OS handheld computers

The software is based primarily on a neography of upper-case characters that can be drawn blindly with a stylus on a touch-sensitive panel. Since the user typically cannot see the character as it is being drawn, complexities have been removed from four of the most difficult letters. "A'" "F", "K" and "T" all are drawn without any need to match up a cross-stroke.

At least one alternative to Graffiti has been developed by Professor Ken Perlin at New York University.

History

Graffiti was developed by Jeff Hawkins, who had previously created "PalmPrint" to recognize natural handwriting. By using a simpler alphabet, computers could easily recognize handwriting. Hawkins believed that people would take the time to learn Graffiti just as people learn to touch-type. Hawkins recalled his insight: "And then it came to me in a flash. Touch-typing is a skill you learn."

Jeff Hawkins also envisioned a single area for writing letters on top of each other. Other pen computers used traditional writing from left to right. The drawback of this is that users run out of screen space after a few words. Graffiti used a different approach. Instead of writing letters normally, users would write one letter on top of another, lifting the pen between them. This meant that each letter had to be one continuous stroke - so, for example, it would be impossible to dot an "i" - but it made it easy for the computer to simply recognize letters in the order they were written, with added glyphs for things like spaces and upper case.

Jeff Hawkins called this system "PowerPalmPrint" or P3. Other engineers at Palm revised and expanded the alphabet that Hawkins had created. Joe Sipher and Ron Marianetti created more characters and punctuation and also designed a prototype of Graffiti that ran on a PC with a tablet peripheral.

Source : Wikipedia

Friday, September 11, 2009

Graffiti Alphabet In Various Fonts On Walls Ellements

graffiti alphabet,graffiti fons
Graffiti Alphabet above is very creative with merger various element Fonts on walls, concrete,etc. The Image graffiti alphabet to be enjoyed.Do you like about the image above?The image is Graffiti art that should be respected.