Phonetic Korean Hangul keyboard system

Coded data generation or conversion – Bodily actuated code generator – Including keyboard or keypad

Reexamination Certificate

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Details

C345S171000, C345S215000, C400S110000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06462678

ABSTRACT:

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to a phonetic Korean keyboard system. More particularly, the present invention relates to an innovative phonetic Korean Hangul keyboard system for a computerized keyboard which improves typing efficiency while significantly relieving finger fatigue during manual data input operation.
Hangul is a phonetic writing system used by more than, 70 million people in South Korea, North Korea and their immigrant communities in other countries. A 28-alphabet Hangul system was created by King Sejong (a fourth King of Chosun Dynasty that lasted 1392 to 1910 on Korea Peninsula) and his scholars in 1443. Four of the Hangul alphabets are no more in use so modern Hangul has 24 phonetic alphabets including 14 basic consonants and 10 basic vowels.
Although Hangul has only 24 basic phonetic alphabets even less than 26 English alphabets, Hangul reserves complication in a syllabic assembly. In order to assemble a readable and meaningful Hangul syllable character, the selected Hangul alphabets should be aligned in a vertical and horizontal order. For example, three Hangul alphabets of “
” are assembled to a syllabic Hangul character “
” according to a required order. Each syllabic Hangul character may look much closer to a Chinese character than to an English word which adopts a horizontal alignment of alphabets. Notwithstanding, each Hangul character belongs to a phonetic language system because it simply consists of 24 basic phonetic alphabets.
In view of typing, Hangul has a further complication since two or three Hangul alphabets incorporate a plurality of combination alphabets in different size and sometimes in different location. So a Hangul alphabet assembly to an individual character requires more than one set of Hangul alphabets because each size and shape of the alphabets should be different to fit within each of near-square Hangul syllable characters. That is, a Hangul consonant
should be different in size and shape when placed within Hangul syllables such as “
”, “
” and “
”. For this reason, a computer requires multiple sets of Hangul alphabets to accomodate those variations of Hangul syllabic characters.
Each Hangul syllable character consists of an initial portion such as “
” of “
” a central portion such as “
” of “
”, and a final portion such as “
” of “
”. Or Hangul syllable character can also be assembled of an inital portion and a central portion without a final portion, as shown in “
”. In this circumstance, when typing into a computer the near-square Hangul syllables using a Korean Standard Hangul Keyboard (KS C 5715) laid out in 1969, the Hangul alphabet has to jump around on the computer screen in response to each new alphabet input so that a visual confusion has been inevitable until the final portion is typed in.
Specifically, when a consonant alphabet is typed after a vowel, the consonant goes under the vowel, and when another vowel comes after this consonant, the vowel jumps over the top of the vowel. Or this consonant attaches to the left side of the bowel if it is a vertically shaped vowel. The mingling of a consonant and a final portion creates such a visual on-screen confusion.
In further review of the Korean Standard Hangul Keyboard (KS C 5715), it should be understood that the 26-key Hangul keyboard standardized by Korean government in 1969 was a simple adoption of the Dvorak system, which became another American English keyboard standard in 1982. Contrary to the traditional Qwerty system, which has vowels all over the places, the Dvorak system has all vowels on the left side of the keyboard. Similarly, all ten vowels on the Korean Standard Hangul keyboard are located on the right hand position except one.
A disadvantage of the first Hangul keyboard was a slowness in typing speed, resulting from the mingling of a consonant and a final portion of a Hangul character. The consonant to be placed in the final portion of a Hangul character needs to be separately typed.
Compared to English typing, Hangul alphabets typed in under the KS C 5175 should be encoded and decoded to appear on the screen in form of a Hangul syllabic character. Further, the assembled syllabic Hangul character has to find a required code number for the appropriate output Hangul font while occupying thousands of code spaces. Also, the KS C 5175 does not include four archaic Hangul alphabets. Also, the standard keyboard requires left hand fingers for both consonants and final portions, where left hand work is almost 50% as much as that of the right hand, thereby further incurring finger fatigue and mis-typing.
Most Hangul software programs currently provide two keyboard systems to chose from. One is called a two set system (Korean standard KS C 6175 mentioned above) and the other is called a three set system (named so because it has initial consonants, central vowels and final consonants) which was originally invented by Dr. Kong Byungwoo in 1949 solely for typewriter use. Despite the fact that this system became non-standard since 1969, people loved to use the typewriter with this three set system.
The Kong system had several keyboard arrangements in the past, mainly due to different typewriter configurations. However, most computer softwares now have a 52 key system so the arrangements of Kong loses its base. Also, it takes a longer time period to remember which Hangul alphabet is located where.
In the syllabic character writing, an initial consonant comes on the left or on top of vowel, and the final consonant comes always under the initial consonant and the vowel. However, under Kong's keyboard arrangement, the initial consonant comes on the right, the vowel comes in the middle and the final consonant on the left. This arrangement is easy to cause a visual confusion. The Kong system also places some of the alphabets on the top row currently being used for numbers and this further slows the input speed. This is the main reason why the Kong system is not used as the standardized simultaneous syllabic character input system.
Further, in the Kong system, left hand fingers are overused. Since all the keys for centrals and finals are located on the left and therefore left hand fingers have to work about 60%, while right hand fingers work only about 40%. In addition, 8 consonants for finals with a usage frequency of 5.8% are located for the left hand little finger while the little finger still requires to use the shift key. The Kong system requires thirteen Hangul alphabets use the shift key.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention is contrived to overcome the conventional disadvantages. Therefore, it is an object of the present invention to provide a phonetic Hangul keyboard system which enables a faster character input by a relocation of Hangul alphabet keys in correspondence to a statistical efficiency.
Another object of the present invention is to enable a faster memorization of Hangul alphabet keys on the keyboard by laying out the keys categorized in similar sound groups and same finger repetitions.
Still another object of the present invention is to provide the Hangul keyboard system convertible to any of the existing Hangul keyboard softwares without requiring mechanical alteration.
In order to achieve the above-described objects, the phonetic Korean Hangul keyboard system according to the present invention comprises a keyboard having an upper row, a middle row, and a bottom row. The upper row has a left upper section and a right upper section, the middle row has a left middle section and a right middle section, and the bottom row has a left bottom section and a right bottom section.
The left upper section has at least five key faces and the left middle section has at least five key faces such that more than ten basic Korean consonants are distributed along the left upper and the left middle key faces. The right upper section has at least five key faces and the right middle section has at least five key faces such that more than seven basic Korean vowels are distributed along the right upper and the right middle key faces. Al

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