Your users are ready for an easier, more natural and intuitive way to use their
computers.
Are you ready to deliver it to them?
Can you afford to wait while your competition develops a great touch, pen, or
speech application
that all of your users will be talking about?
Let The UML Guy build your next-generation tool,
with features
that will have all your users excited, including...
- A natural pen-based interface, allowing users to draw and write what they
think.
- Gesture-driven controls, giving your application an intuitive user
interface that users will quickly adopt.
- Speech output, letting users work
without looking at the screen.
- Voice control, letting users work
without touching pen or screen or keyboard or mouse.
- Mobile awareness, letting users
work anywhere, automatically uploading and downloading new information when they
reach a wireless connection.
- Integration with Microsoft OneNote, as well as other tools.
The UML Guy (named a Tablet PC Influential by Microsoft) has been building
Tablet/Touch and Speech solutions since 2003. His
Tablet PC Developer Training was selected by Microsoft for their Tablet PC
Enterprise Sales Support program, and he has written and marketed Tablet PC
tools as well as articles and presentations on how to quickly get started with
Tablet PC work. He'll work with you to analyze, design, and quickly deliver applications that will make your users smile -- and make them
more productive as well.
To discuss your Tablet PC or Touch Screen Solution, Contact The UML Guy.
Or maybe you want The UML Guy to train your team
to build great Tablet/Touch applications...
Or maybe you have other software engineering needs...
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I've been an unabashed Tablet PC fan since before I owned my first Tablet. I wasn't quite sure
why, but I just knew there was power there that I wanted to tap.
Then I got my first Tablet, and I learned the answer: Ink and Gestures and Speech are natural,
powerful ways for users to control computers; and thanks to Microsoft, it was easy for me to add them
to my applications. I wrote the first prototype for my Tablet UML tool in four hours after I
got that first Tablet PC. I learned a lot since, and have added speech programming and network awareness
to my skill set; but the most important thing I learned is how powerful the Tablet PC is. Code that's
easy to write and easy to use: that's a win-win.
With new touchscreen hardware and the upcoming Windows 7, Tablet PC programming techniques are
spreading throughout the Windows world. Let me bring that power to your solutions.
-- Martin L. Shoemaker (The UML Guy)
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