![Rich Alossi](/img/default-banner.jpg)
- 8
- 306 605
Rich Alossi
Приєднався 26 жов 2006
Primer vehicle del tramvia a la Plaça Verdaguer de Barcelona
Primer vehicle del tramvia a la Plaça Verdaguer de Barcelona
Переглядів: 1 531
Відео
Jellyfish in the canals of Venice
Переглядів 254 роки тому
Jellyfish in the canals of Venice, Santa Croce district - filmed by Rich Alossi
Rich Alossi shows the very first train on the Amsterdam GVB Metro Noord-Zuidlijn's opening day
Переглядів 285 років тому
Rich Alossi shows the very first train on the Amsterdam GVB Metro Noord-Zuidlijn's opening day
Rich Alossi shows the very first train on the Amsterdam GVB Metro Noord-Zuidlijn's opening day
Переглядів 765 років тому
Rich Alossi shows the very first train on the Amsterdam GVB Metro Noord-Zuidlijn's opening day
Rich Alossi showing the sound of Italian cicadas, at Castello di Vezio, Varenna, Lombardy, Italy
Переглядів 1545 років тому
This is the sound of Italian cicadas, at Castello di Vezio, Varenna, Lombardy, Italy. Video by Rich Alossi
Rich Alossi Records Chittering European Eurasian Magpies (pica pica) from rooftop
Переглядів 286 років тому
These guys love sitting on these poles talking to each other all day. Filmed in Amsterdam, Netherlands, 18 July 2018
Rich Alossi Doing Stenography at 200 Words Per Minute
Переглядів 305 тис.15 років тому
Rich Alossi shorthand reporting (stenography) typical Congressional testimony at 200 words per minute, then at 210 words per minute using a Stenograph-brand Elan Mira A3 writer. Sorry for the poor sound; concrete floors cause an echo.
Enhirabuena Barcelona!
Enhorabuena ;)
Ai taking over this in a few years time......
Great video
Bravo, Rich! 225 wpm is not far off....practice, practice, practice! Or as my teacher from 1974 said. "Perfect practice makes perfect."
I think it is hysterical that RT News uses a still from your video for their headline lol, check it out -> ua-cam.com/video/mWyanCPxUgE/v-deo.html
Very bad
the wpm is exaggerated completely
DANG! I was following your fingers and when she got to "provide," I saw the unmistakable vowel combination of OEU. I was all, "DAAAAAMN! He is RIGHT UPON the speaker!" NICE!!! Once I start fading more than about three words, I know my ship is listing as the "Oh, crap I gotta catch up" comes into the back of my head. As we all know, the instant you THINK...you're doomed! LOL
Die Mensch Maschine
Daaaaang. I want to learn how to type so I could get a good job.
This is not typing!
I would like to see the end result lol
I've for the longest time wondered what this position in the court room was, now I'm even more confused as to how this works.
court reporters do depositions, court room records, closed captioning on television, all kinds of stuff. their job is to capture every single word spoken in real time. they are able to do this because they don't type one letter at a time like you would on a keyboard. think of it more like a piano. when you play a song on the piano, you are pressing several keys at once to create a chord of several notes. when you press several keys at once on a stenograph machine, you are creating one word at a time, several words at a time, or a punctuation mark. it's a shorthand language that you have to learn and practice to get better and faster.
@Ryan Carlen Court reporters are highly trained professionals who share a unique ability to convert the spoken word into information that can be read, searched and archived. This specialization has created new career paths for reporters, including broadcast captioning and realtime translation services for people who are deaf and hard of hearing.
thanks for sharing, gives me a good idea of what the job entails (considering going back to school for Court Reporting). also a lot of the people commenting on you being slow are dumb. ps. this looks like it was done in the 80s lol. may want to update? thanks again for the vid!
GET NEW SPEAKERS FOR THE LOVE OF GOD
this shit is impressive
why don't they simply use voice recorders for this purpose? shouldn't this be redundant by now?
My guess is that you'd have to go through an entire audio record (an hour or more) to find whatever you're looking for while a text document can have its contents pin pointed in an instant. It becomes more practical to quote the document than the audio log.
***** This goes without mentioning that you can transfer and reproduce the document more easily than packing hours-long audio files with good quality through a network for a playback device.
I see it now. I guess I underestimated its utility.
well then, it looks like our recording technology needs to improve, IE a 'control F' key in the recording. with speech recognition it can be done
One minor reason is audio recorders can't ask an expert witness, who may speak English unintelligibly, to clarify their speech at the time they are testifying.
I would rather play a piano.lols
Hi Alossix, I'd like to ask you a question: generally how much time a person need to be professional (starting from zero) and type to your speed with a minimum perncetage of errors? How many months or years of study? Thank you very much.
Typically, about three to four years. But the rate of dropout of stenography school is higher than the Marines. Meaning, it is harder to become a stenographer than a Marine.
Thank you for answer. I'm becoming a stenographer, but I'm doing everything by myself because in Italy there are not school. Can I ask you the pleasure of a short mail or skype conversation? I've some technical doubts that a professional stenographer can easily clarify. In case this is my mail casaroladaniele@gmail.com Thank you anyway
I wouldn't say that it's necessarily harder just due to a drop out rate. There are a lot more factors that could influence the rate, such as the school itself, benefits, career prospects, the type of people it attracts, and so forth.
Stenographers are essentially all geniuses.
iTheGeek you think that's low? You obviously haven't done freelancing
Rich Alossi I'm studying to do court reporting. I'm hoping for that, haha
You can do it, happyfacefries. My screen saver on my laptop is: 225 IS reachable!!! Just remember: It gets frustrating when you come so close to passing a test (I got a 94.92% on my first literary in a higher speed class...I had in my notes OF THE and I careless transcribed it as FROM THE...that ONE mistake put me from a passing C- to a fail. GRRRR). Do not expect others who are not familiar with the course work frustrate you and do NOT rely upon them for reactions when you pass a test. They think it's great, but they have positively no clue what a huge success that is. Remember...YOU are in this for YOU. It's all between you and the words. I cannot wait to hear your progress! K R O E R -G T T P O*EFR !!!
but i didn't think the U.S. courts used stenographers anymore? i'm confused. where do you work?
+liwmld i say this because i also transcribe court proceedings. in our state, nebraska, in all judicial districts that i am aware of, we do not use stenography anymore; rather, record the hearings using multiple channel recordings, then they download the trial onto a CD and give that to my boss, who gives it to me... i use a Liberty Court Player to listen and transcribe.
i see. well, thank you. i didn't know that. i was actually doing medical transcription for 30+ years, but six months ago got this court reporter position, which, as i said, does not involve me going to court. my boss said, except in maybe some small one-horse towns, in Nebraska, at any rate, we do not use stenographers anymore. i assumed that was nationwide. shows what i know :). thanks for the answer.
New years gift
how many words per minute on a regular pc keyboard s possible?
You know they got computers now? The 1980's called, they want their technology back
It's almost impossible to type this fast without a stenograph machine. These are still used today.
you are a pure moron.
you're a dumbass
lol
Forrest Gump called, he wants his brain back!!
it doesn't look like 200 words per minute at all
Because he types each word at the same time. each time he presses down his fingers is a word already. (i could be wrong)
Stevensydan
Venestt My girlfriend just tried to explain this to me. They type using "steno" which is very shortened abbreviations for what they are saying It then can be translated into actual text. here is a video that helped me a bit. ua-cam.com/video/__JkYUrIglg/v-deo.html Show less
Hes typing in steno. No stenographer actually types out what they are saying letter for letter.
one push of the buttons can be like 4 or 5 words together. for example: "it is for you to say"= SFRUTS- you push all these keys down at once
I have the student version of the Mira (Cybra) -- really nice machine with an easy touch.
What happens if you miss a few words someone spoke?
Your job is to not miss them. If you did, you fucked up.
@@diegoarmando8798 when the reply has more likes than the comment its self...
It’s not a big deal
When I’m watching live news etc they always miss words and put random words in that sound similar
Ryan Carlen you mean if I say ‘it’ and they wrote shit, it can be an issue?
Holy crap i want to know how to do that
man...I would be a nightmare to transcribe...I talk really fast sometimes
I wish my palantype machine were as quiet.
Thanks for the crazy boring video
Thanks for that stunning reply. I'll bet you're a riot at parties. It is boring because you simply do not get it and have no desire to "get it." My question is: Why did you watch it?
Bri Martens let's see you do that.
It has also been my experience that people who makes comments such as this...they are usually the ones who have NO CLUE or comprehension of what they just saw. It bores them because a professional makes it look easy. Dollypop, you wouldn't last two weeks in the course, and not because you wouldn't want to do it. I'm saying if I offered you $100,000 to complete the schooling...you couldn't do it. That's my forecast and I stand by it.
Looks awesome! Just a question... Do you think that voice-to-text software might take away from this profession in the future?
no
No.
Yes it’s already in the process
Sure, when I get around to it.
post a vid on youtube
Nope, I can touch type at that speed and as for only using 1 finger, it's how I learned to type.
i think youre lying :) and if you arent lying youre just staring at your keyboard which is bad if youre trying to copy notes in school or something
I just don't see how this works...
The fingers of the left hand presses the consonants at the beginning of a syllable and the fingers of the right hand presses the consonants at the end of the syllable, with the thumb hitting vowels on the bar at the bottom (AO EU from left to right [hitting E+U creates the short I sound, and hitting the two keys on the opposite hand creates a long vowel sound for the solo key]). Each chord (or individual syllable) is held until all keys of the chord have been hit and released together. Many common polysyllabic words have briefs (think "shortcuts") that you can hit instead of spelling out the whole word, like how you can type out STRAT for "strategy", for example. The machine either renders out each chord as a printed row of all of the characters you used or it uses a built in dictionary to put out what you chorded into plain text.
NO!
Alossix i m a court stenographer but i wana purchase steno machine like that. Kindly contact me or help me for the same. Skype shujahpairoshah.... Viber 00923006268269
Yeah, but how's your accuracy? That's a hard take.
I can average 80 wpm on a regular keyboard using only 1 finger on each hand.
Don't look like he's doing 200 words
I understand it "don't look" like it, but it is. Rather than comment, please improve your grammar. People who use improper grammar are a NIGHTMARE to this reporting student. OY!
He is using Shorthand (Stenography).
i dont understand how this is fast.. i'm watching it and it just doesn't look that fast..
Hey we are looking for Stenographer please send me mail ademkali@gmail.com
Amazed!!!! WOW!!!! no idea how you do it.
so the brain can't actually focus on the idea itself, only paying attention to the sounds to type them? would be a bummer to be called to do this on a super important secret meeting and you wouldn't have any idea what they actually talked about..
Fuck man. if i practiced what do you think i could get? i can type 120 pretty steadily at 110 with no errors.
i wanna learn how to use this gadget.
so how fast do you type on a normal keyboard?
Right, makes sense, 5