I mentioned this as an aside in a previous thread: when Skritter prompts me for pinyin, I don't like switching from the writing tablet to the keyboard. It's awkward, especially when I'm skrittering on my laptop away from a desk, on a park bench or in a café.
Ideally I could write the pronunciation using the pen, in pinyin or zhuyin, but that's not going to happen soon, if ever. I'd be interested to know how others deal with this. Here's what I've tried:
1. Virtual keyboard (Windows 7): it's OK, and useful if the keyboard is very inaccessible, but it's slower than typing, too hunt-and-peck with the pen.
2. Handwriting recognition (Windows 7) is not nearly good enough, especially since it doesn't know about pinyin.
3. Speech recognition would be great... I wonder if some kind of speech-to-pinyin software is available...
4. The "click-to-show and self-grade method", suggested by @sarac, has been working pretty well for me. As she says, "any lessening of quality in review is counterbalanced by the time and annoyance of switching to/from the pen/keyboard. Especially so since I mis-typed often enough that the self-grading doesn't intrude on the flow of practice". Also, with this method, I say the pronunciation out loud before the click-to-show, which is probably better than typing.
One small problem with this method is that when I click-to-show, the word is marked as "don't know", which I then correct to "got it" if I got it right. Call me proud, but I don't like seeing every word I'm tested on as "don't know" by default, even if it's just for a second.
But that's a minor problem. So far I do like the time I save by not using the keyboard at all.
previous discussion here:
http://www.skritter.com/forum/topic?id=99376533#99610732
http://www.skritter.com/forum/topic?id=99376533#100673522