It's a standard feature which I have no idea how to turn off.Why do people even use autocorrect?
It's a standard feature which I have no idea how to turn off.Why do people even use autocorrect?
I found the e-mail where Michael and I decided to do it. He seemed to think we were the first, too.I can't be certain, but I'm pretty sure none of them did. When I used it for Skon and Sarek's family name in Uncertain Logic, I stated in my annotations (confirming my own unreliable memory) that I did so for the sake of consistency with Tears, and cited Ishmael as its origin. So at least I'm not and was not aware of any intervening uses.
I was sure I must've commented on the name's unlikely popularity as a piece of fanon among Millennial and Zoomer fans on Tumblr and AO3 who came to the scene after the 2009 movie or DSC here in TrekLit, but when I Googled it, I just found me mentioning it in the Babylon 5 thread in SF&F. I must not have used the exact name in my reply.Hehe, I got your point; in fact, I thought about you as soon as I saw the poster on fb!
For phones, it's a necessary evil given the smallness and flatness of the keys. It's actually a fairly interesting technical process how the phone makes it look like you're typing on a normal keyboard, but behind the scenes, it's "cheating" to make things easier. For instance, when you type a letter, it predicts based on an internal dictionary which letters you're most likely to type next, and makes the touch-targets for those letters slightly bigger than normal so they're easier to hit (which, I guess, is things coming full circle with the QWERTY keyboard intentionally being designed so letters that normally go together are separated on the keyboard to prevent mechanical jams on typewriters). I remember when I was first learning to type on a smartphone, the trick was to not worry about accuracy, and just sort of mash the keys based on your muscle-memory of a full-sized keyboard, and let autocorrect figure it out. It's actually kind of fun to watch misspelling-ridden gibberish magically transform into exactly what I was trying to type. Though it's gotten a bit worse in recent years, at least on Apple devices, possibly due to some attempts to make the feature "smarter" which backfired. On computers, on the other hand, it's just a useful feature (sometimes) for resolving common errors. Heck, I wrote "teh" more than once while I was drafting this post (and getting it to not fix itself was a bit of a chore just now).It's a standard feature which I have no idea how to turn off.
When it comes to intentionally misspelling words, I find it best to write them in all caps, since my computer automatically assumes such a word is meant to be an acronym and won't flag it as misspelled or try to correct it.On computers, on the other hand, it's just a useful feature (sometimes) for resolving common errors. Heck, I wrote "teh" more than once while I was drafting this post (and getting it to not fix itself was a bit of a chore just now).
For phones, it's a necessary evil given the smallness and flatness of the keys.
I remember when I was first learning to type on a smartphone, the trick was to not worry about accuracy, and just sort of mash the keys based on your muscle-memory of a full-sized keyboard, and let autocorrect figure it out.
I hear that. And it's true of clamshell phones with real keys, too. Some years ago, after buying a tricorne at Colonial Williamsburg, I texted "Mein Hut, der hat drei Ecken" to a friend, and it came out utterly unrecognizable.Phone autocorrect seems far more aggressive and intolerant of anything outside its dictionary, and it often seems to me like it does more harm than good.
Spock's full name, S'Chn T'Gai Spock from Barbara Hambly's Ishmael appears to be canon now. As is Jabilo M'Benga.
Hate seeing "S'chn T'gain" canonized.
Just out of curiosity, why don't you like it (if you don't mind me asking)? I'm actually quite happy with both of these. And really relieved they didn't decide to go with "Xtm-cat-walking-on-keyboard" for Spock.
I just think that Spock is such an iconic character that it's a bad idea to change his name after almost 60 years. It's not a dealbreaker for me -- I'm still looking forward to the show -- but I just really don't like the idea of changing his name.
It’s not really “changing” his name, though. It’s adding to it, in the same way that “Nyota” added to Uhura’s name after more than forty years of her never having an officially spoken first name.
Peter David used exactly that idea in “The Rift” for Number One. “You’re so emotionally distant you won’t even call your first officer by name!” “I don’t call her by name because I can’t pronounce it. Neither can you.”Personally, I'm rather eager to hear how S'Chn T'Gai is supposed to be pronounced. Though part of me suspects they may make an in-joke out of it with everyone seeing the name on Spock's file and attempt to pronounce it, just to be met with his disapproving stares to indicate they pronounced it wrong.
So some intern making posters probably just got their full names by Googling and ended up on Memory Beta.
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