New App That helps you Speed Read a 320 page Book in 2.5 Hours

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New App That Lets you Speed Read a 320 page Book in 2.5 Hours

reading-books.jpg


There's great news for the generation with the most rapidly shrinking attention spans in history (please keep reading)!

Spritz is a new speed reading app that will help you read at a pace of up to 1,000 words per minute (for comparison, the average college-level reader clocks in at the positively sluglike pace of 200-400 wpm). One Imgur user did the math, and at just 500 wpm you could finish Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone in about two and a half hours. Damn.

The app is optimized for small screens and set to be released soon with the Samsung Galaxy S5 and Samsung Gear 2 watch (because you know you always wanted to finish an entire novel while staring at your wrist). It works by presenting just one word at a time, each aligned by its "Optimal Recognition Point" (aka the "ORP" or "fixation point," which is typically found just left of center in a word — but more that in a second). Give it a try:



This is 250 wpm:

509a7f6ac6f5354eba72ae9d1b2a61e8.gif



350 wpm:

eacd7840bd3fd6bf30b048891fa01523.gif



500 wpm:

89608a807e2b2a7b3e737f3e4dfc7451.gif






1,000 wpm isn't available yet in gif form, but you get the gist.

Spritz isn't the first speed reading app to hit the market, but it's different from other rapid serial visual presentation (or RSVP) readers because it arranges words in a more readily comprehended way. Spritz's website explains, "After your eyes find the ORP, your brain starts to process the meaning of the word that you're viewing ... When reading, only around 20% of your time is spent processing content. The remaining 80% is spent physically moving your eyes from word to word and scanning for the next ORP."

Thus by aligning ORPs, Spritz speeds up comprehension considerably.

The experience takes some getting used to, of course, and you have to practice at each level before you get used to the speed. But it's still pretty amazing. Here's to never having to fake your way through a book club meeting (or cla##) again.​
 
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When this shit droppin? I need that

kind of almost doesn't sound like a stand alone app to me, looks like they want it to be part of an app like an option to read in SMS messaging, email, facebook, twitter, Adobe Reader or an article reader on a web browser. They are also looking for developers to add it to smart TV's for faster reading of closed captioning. Great idea.

http://www.spritzinc.com/#
 
App that Helps You Read Novels in under 90 Mins

Other apps have offered up similar types of rapid serial visual presentation to enhance reading speed and convenience on mobile devices in the past.

However, what Spritz does differently (and brilliantly) is manipulate the format of the words to more appropriately line them up with the eye’s natural motion of reading.

The “Optimal Recognition Point” (ORP) is slightly left of the center of each word, and is the precise point at which our brain deciphers each jumble of letters.

The unique aspect of Spritz is that it identifies the ORP of each word, makes that letter red and presents all of the ORPs at the same space on the screen.

In this way, our eyes don’t move at all as we see the words, and we can therefore process information instantaneously rather than spend time decoding each word.

http://www.spritzinc.com/#
 
Re: App that Helps You Read Novels in under 90 Mins

Sure you can read it in 90 minutes but you won't retain shit
 
Re: New App That Lets you Speed Read a 320 page Book in 2.5 Hours

The University of Victoria's Michael Masson, another psychologist who has studied RSVP and reading comprehension, concurred.

"Put simply, comprehension takes time," he wrote in an email to NBC News. "There are barriers regarding how rapidly words can be identified and how rapidly the corresponding concepts can be assembled into meaningful propositions."

Masson did a study back in 1983 comparing RSVP to ordinary skimming. The findings: "Performance was better when skimming than when reading with RSVP."

For reading a headline or quick summary, Spritz and RSVP might be fine. But anything more than that is probably going to go, so to speak, in one ear and out the other.


http://www.nbcnews.com/tech/tech-news/not-so-fast-speed-reading-app-fails-convince-experts-n46411
 
Re: New App That Lets you Speed Read a 320 page Book in 2.5 Hours

Holy crap! :eek:

I could read at 500 wpm!
I didn't miss one beat.

So, umm... where's the free d/l link?:D
 
Some of yall can't even read this thread.

Shit is not out yet. May not be a stand alone app. May just run on top of things or be a new way for things like on your TV for closed captions.

Or run on browsers for reading articles. May run on your text app..
So may not be for just an app by itself it seems. They are looking for developers to make it integrate into every aspect of your day.
 
Some of yall can't even read this thread.

Shit is not out yet.
May not be a stand alone app. May just run on top of things or be a new way for things like on your TV for closed captions.

Or run on browsers for reading articles. May run on your text app..
So may not be for just an app by itself it seems. They are looking for developers to make it integrate into every aspect of your day.
:lol:
 
There's been studies noting the drawbacks of this technology. But after trying it, I can see some tremendous uses for it. You can speed read through 97% of the book, and notate the 3% that really matters to you.
 
1. I'm a speed reader and I do that shit using lines not words

2. Retaining that shit will be difficult as your brain has less patterning to retain.
I could look at a page for a couple seconds and recall it. i can also recall page on which content is found.

same with websites.
I can probably refer you to a website from recall on any topic you bring up

3. They are using that simulation to build traction by getting signups before they even start building the app (Startup 101)

Same shit dropbox did, made an exciting video and get signups. Once that was done, they head to silicon valley with the email list showing actual interest and they get funding.
They didn't try to build it and then throw it out there to see what happens


All this is a part of their viral strategy


:cool:
 
1. I'm a speed reader and I do that shit using lines not words

2. Retaining that shit will be difficult as your brain has less patterning to retain.
I could look at a page for a couple seconds and recall it. i can also recall page on which content is found.

same with websites.
I can probably refer you to a website from recall on any topic you bring up

3. They are using that simulation to build traction by getting signups before they even start building the app (Startup 101)

Same shit dropbox did, made an exciting video and get signups. Once that was done, they head to silicon valley with the email list showing actual interest and they get funding.
They didn't try to build it and then throw it out there to see what happens


All this is a part of their viral strategy


:cool:

check your PM

you gotta recommend some books or sites on this?

Can ANYONE (any age?) pick up this particular skill?
 
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