The tool is mainly designed for languages in which some characters are
easier to draw than type.

STORY HIGHLIGHTS
 Google has added a tool that reads your handwriting and turns it into text
The new input option is available on Gmail and Google Docs
It's aimed at languages where drawing a character might be easier than
typing it on a keyboard

For many, typing has long overtaken handwriting as their primary word
and sentence creation method. So much so that some schools no longer
teach cursive.

But now, Google is bringing some good old fashioned handwriting back
to modern communication, adding new handwriting input tools to Gmail
and Google Docs.

Those tools now allow you to write out what you want to say with a
mousepad or cursor and Google will do its best to create a typed
version of your words. The input box will show the most likely matches
for your word, so below your handwritten "cats" it might display this
list of possible words: cats, rats, Cats, oats, and carts. Click on
the right one and keep on writing.

The tool might have a harder time deciphering your fancy calligraphy
or messy chicken scratches, but it seems to do a decent job with my
sloppy cursive-ish writing.

While English is an option, it's more for complicated alphabets where
drawing out a character is sometimes easier than typing it, like
Japanese or Hindi.

"Handwriting input makes the internet easier to use by people
worldwide and is also part of a larger effort to break the barrier
between languages," said Google's Xiangye Xia in a blog post
announcing the feature.

Gmail users can get the new tool in more than 50 languages, Google
Docs users in more than 20.

To test it out, go to your Gmail or Docs settings and, under the
Languages setting in the General tab, click "Show all language
options." Select the box that says "Enable input tools" and you'll get
a list of every type of keyboard Google has to offer. The languages
with a pencil icon beside them are the ones that support written
words.

Once you've added an input option, you can select it anytime from a
drop down on top of the menu bar above the document or email you're
writing.

Google already has handwriting support for its mobile translation apps
so you can scrawl a word on the screen and see it instantly in another
language. This is particularly helpful if you're not familiar with a
local alphabet and want to know what something says.

Source:
http://edition.cnn.com/2013/10/23/tech/innovation/google-handwriting-support/index.html

-- 
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& Black keys are sad moments.
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Warm Regards,

Hozefa...

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