Showing posts with label Jeff deck. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jeff deck. Show all posts

Monday, August 9, 2010

The Cupertino Effect

Cupertino [1]. It’s a city of 55,000 people 45 miles south east of San Francisco [2] – towards the southern end of what’s called Silicon Valley. Wikipedia says it’s named after St Joseph of Cupertino who in turn was named after the Italian town of Copertino [3]. These days Cupertino’s best known as the location of the world-wide headquarters of Apple Inc (pictured). Today I write of it in another, but still computer-related context, i.e. the Cupertino Effect [4]. Though the CE appeared and was named years ago, I became aware of it only 1-2 weeks – via the intro to a Radiolab podcast [5]. What is the CE? A computer spellchecker’s tendency to suggest inappropriate words to replace misspelt words. The CE originated due to older spellcheckers changing the word ‘cooperation’ to ‘Cupertino’ – as their dictionaries contained only the hyphenated form, i.e. co-operation. Users sometimes clicked ‘Change All’ without checking the spellchecker’s suggestion, resulting in even official documents with phrases like ‘valuable experience in international Cupertino’ and ‘presentation on African-German Cupertino’. Whilst modern spellcheckers have all but eliminated the ‘cooperation’ to ‘Cupertino’ error, other incorrect word substitutions ensure the CE’s continuing existence. Following on from yesterday’s Farmdoc’s Blog post, the CE – only a short segue from misspelt signs – may be a nice topic for Jeff Deck’s next project. Ho hum.

Sunday, August 8, 2010

The Grate Typo Hunt

Jeff Deck (pictured). Last week, a microsecond after I learned of his exploits, I added him to my list of heroes. Deck, an American, had been keen on spelling since junior high school when he won some spelling bees. After seeing lots of misspellings on signs around Boston where he lived, he decided he’d had enough. So in early 2008 he and some friends set off on a 3-month US-wide quest to repair misspellings on signs [1]. The target was to fix one error per day. (They found 400 and fixed 200.) The self-styled Typo Eradication Advancement League [TEAL] [2] blogged about their ‘2008 Typo Hunt Across America’ [3]. A book resulted: The Great Typo Hunt – Two friends changing the world, one correction at a time, by Deck and Benjamin D Herson [4], was published last week [5]. And thus the ‘Typo Hunt II: Book Tour’ [6]. Me? I’ve an above average interest in spelling. Call me a pedant or borderline OCD. I don’t mind. Clearly there are two types of spelling error: a mistake (where writer knew the correct spelling) and a non-mistake (where the writer didn’t). I can forgive the latter, but not the former. Because (before, during and) after all, the purpose of language is communication. And I reckon almost all misspelt signs still communicate the intended message. Be all this as it may, Deck’s still my hero. I hope the State Library of Tasmania buys a copy of his book for public loan.