As part of AAC in the Cloud Conference for 2020 and the CM Sessions we presented on our work using morse code with clients. Find below the video of this presentation – but also some more detail about the resources we mention in the video and our ongoing development projects related to morse code (namely learn-morse and BLEMorse).
Background to Morse code
There is an absolutely fantastic podcast from the Memory Palace – called “Distance” which tells the story of Morse and why it was developed – have a listen
For a lot of radio operators and HAM enthusiasts morse sounds like this:
Morse in AT – Evidence base
AT-Node is an invaluable resource for looking at text entry rates and comparing them between input methods. As part of this, there is a nice overview of morse code – looking at the stats from AT-Node here.
As another great introductory video on Morse take a look at this video from VSauce who nicely discusses the pros and cons of different ways of learning morse:
There are a lot of different tools to learn morse online:
So we have used the Morse learn for a number of clients but as we discussed this isn’t great for people who have a visual impairment – and some (e.g. the VSauce video above) feel that auditory just works better for them. So we have created an adapted morse-learn app which is available at https://morse-learn.acecentre.net – we have some plans for this – and we are welcome to people helping out to improve it. See more at http://github.com/acecentre/morse-learn
Do have a look at Jim Lubins website for a lot of links to products and solutions available.
In short, we have some hardware like the excellent TandemMaster which sees any PC/Mac/iOS device as a keyboard & mouse – OR there are some software solutions that you can use on iOS or Windows.