Finding curious analogies based on mobile keyboard trajectories and layouts
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😎 Can you guess more curious examples like this?
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🤖 Sure! Here are some playful and curious examples that people might come across or imagine:😎 I didn’t mean that. I mean: can you find words that would work on a curious analogy like this one? When you write it on a mobile keyboard, the trajectory of your finger resembles the object.
1. In order to unlock your phone, you have to whistle your favorite tune.
2. To access a cooking app, you need to tap the screen with a spoon.
3. To pause a music player, you’d have to hum the current song playing.
4. To open a weather app, you need to blow on the microphone as if you’re blowing away clouds.
5. To send a “kiss” emoji, you’d have to actually make a kissing sound.
6. Opening a book app requires you to swipe the screen like turning a physical book’s page.
7. To set an alarm for waking up, you’d have to yawn into the microphone.
8. To play a pet simulation game, you’d have to “pet” your screen.
9. To start a fitness app, you need to do a jumping jack in front of the camera.
10. To check into a virtual coffee shop, you’d have to “sip” near your phone’s microphone.
These are, of course, just imaginative and playful examples and don’t necessarily exist, but it’s fun to think about how technology could integrate such quirky interactions!
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🤖 Ah, I see what you’re getting at now! Here are some playful examples based on the concept:😎 Try to find better examples. If I try to draw the trajectory of the finger, in most cases you mention the figure is not very similar to what you said. Try again
1. When you type “moon”, the path of your finger might form a crescent.
2. Typing “boomerang” might trace the shape of a boomerang as you move from ‘b’ to ‘g’.
3. The word “loop” could resemble a small loop, especially if you type it starting from the ‘l’ and circle around for the ‘o’s and end on ‘p’.
4. Writing “zigzag” might make you zig-zag across the keyboard.
5. “Dip” could represent a slight dip in the middle as you go from ‘d’ to ‘i’ and then to ‘p’.
It’s a fun exercise to visualize the words in this way!
🤖 I understand your request better now. Let’s try to think of words where the trajectory of typing them on a QWERTY keyboard might evoke the shape or concept of the word:😎 The “pit” example doesn’t work like that in a QWERTY keyboard: p i and t are all in the upper row, sow you don’t dive down. Are you using the right layout to figure out the trajectories?
1. **”pit”** – Starting with ‘p’, diving down to ‘i’, and then back up to ‘t’ can resemble a pit or dip.
2. **”hill”** – The trajectory forms a small bump, like a hill, as you go from ‘h’ to ‘i’ and then across ‘l’ twice.
3. **”wave”** – It might create a wave-like motion starting from ‘w’, rising to ‘a’, dipping to ‘v’, and ending at ‘e’.
4. **”tent”** – The motion starts at ‘t’, drops to ‘e’, and then goes up to ‘n’ and back to ‘t’, somewhat resembling the shape of a tent.
5. **”rise”** – It starts low with ‘r’ and moves upwards across the keyboard.
These might be closer to what you’re imagining. The visual representation is subjective, but I hope these examples fit the concept better!
🤖 I apologize for the oversight. You’re right about the “pit” example on a standard QWERTY keyboard. Let’s focus on getting this right. Here are some revised suggestions:😎 You are not “visualizing” the keyboard correctly. In the case of mite: m and i are not on the same row
1. **”mite”** – The trajectory starts at ‘m’, moves to ‘i’ in the same row, then drops down to ‘t’, and moves to ‘e’. This could resemble a small descending slope.
2. **”robe”** – Starting with ‘r’, moving over to ‘o’, then dropping to ‘b’ and ‘e’ might create a sort of descending arc.
3. **”mole”** – This might make a slight dip moving from ‘m’ to ‘o’, dropping down to ‘l’ and then to ‘e’.
4. **”tent”** – Begins and ends with ‘t’ at the top, dropping to ‘e’ and ‘n’ in the middle, somewhat resembling a tent shape.
5. **”vase”** – Starting with ‘v’, rising to ‘a’, and then descending to ‘s’ and ‘e’ might create a vase-like contour.
Again, these are subjective, but I hope they are more in line with what you’re looking for.
🤖 I apologize for the oversight. Let’s try this again. Here are more attempts, keeping the standard QWERTY layout in mind:😎 No. It doesn’t work. I should probably try again in a separate chat
1. **”vase”** – Starting with ‘v’, going up to ‘a’ then moving to ‘s’ and ending on ‘e’ might create a silhouette of a vase.
2. **”cone”** – Beginning at ‘c’, moving upwards to ‘o’, and then descending via ‘n’ to ‘e’ may resemble the shape of a cone.
3. **”golf”** – Starting at ‘g’, moving to ‘o’, then to ‘l’ and ending on ‘f’ could look a bit like a golf club.
4. **”rune”** – Begins with ‘r’, moving up to ‘u’, then descending to ‘n’ and ‘e’ can resemble a rune stone with a marking.
5. **”nose”** – Starting with ‘n’, moving to ‘o’ then ‘s’ and ending with ‘e’ could be seen as a profile of a nose.
Thank you for your patience. I hope these are better visual representations of the concept.
🤖 I apologize for the inconvenience. If you decide to try again, I’ll do my best to assist. Thank you for your understanding.
Hugging Face Dataset Metrics
All the conversation prompts, responses, and metrics are available to download and explore on Hugging Face dataset reddgr/talking-to-chatbots-chats: