A keypad on the back of a jellyfish
Take a look at what is not shown here, a mouse, the five fingers serve needs, but it's a keyboard.
This is a keyboard that does not require two hands, either. It is developed by Erik Campbell and used combinations fnger as piano strings to the nature of the right letters, numbers or other symbols.
This is not the first time someone has got a one-handed keyboard and designed by Doug Engelbart in 1968 is like a box with the keys like a piano.
The Campbell model is rounder and good-looking, and borrows its form from nature than resemles the back of a jellyfish.
I suppose this could be the beginning of a new era with one hand, keyboards, and I can see a day when the traditional QWERTY disappeared.
Then all we have on our desks, is a mouse and a one-handed keyboard. I think the interface is very interesting.
Of course, there could be some time before we transition into the era of one-handed keyboard. I mean, if I did not get in the way back to, so I am sure if it's worth.
But I will not be the last man still on a QWERTY keyboard. I see myself in the hospital on my QWERTY with the visit of the parents monitor how children of typewriters for today.