Open Steno Project timeline

From Plover Wiki

The Open Steno Project has a lot of different goals and projects, and sometimes it's hard to tell what happened when. This page aims to provide a summary of events with dates for anyone curious.

September 2005 to March 2007 (18 months)

Backstory

Mirabai Knight attends the New York Career Institute to learn stenography at 225 words per minute.

2007

Backstory

Mirabai creates a dictionary builder, named Bozzy, with help from her brother William. It's a program that reads from a word list and creates a dictionary using raw steno input. It requires the use of CAT software set to send keys to the computer instead of a transcript.

2008

Backstory

Mirabai decides she wants to create an open source steno software, unsatisfied with the current proprietary, bloated, and expensive solutions.

Mirabai starts to learn python and breaks down technical challenges that will need to be addressed with a steno program that is actually a keyboard emulator. She notes that the timer feature from other steno software is awful and that Plover should process each stroke immediately. The idea of what Plover should be goes through much process. Does it have a document editor? A UI at all? Is it a program? Is it a keyboard?

October 2009

Plover

Mirabai meets Joshua Lifton, via an ad Mirabai posted in her shared-workspace building elevator looking for a Python tutor. Joshua becomes the lead Plover developer, funded by Mirabai and donations to the project.

Plover is developed on Ubuntu and is Linux-only.

June 2010

Education

Mirabai begins writing her Steno 101 series.

October 2010

Plover

First public release of Plover (version 2.0) Plover is Linux-only and supports only the Gemini PR machine protocol, as well as regular NKRO keyboard input.

December 2010

Plover

Joshua moves to Oregon to work at Crowd Supply, and the Plover Project is put on hiatus with minimal development. Plover 2.2.0 is released.

April 2011

Education

Mirabai posts musings and thoughts about gamifying steno education. She calls it Hover Plover (later renamed to Steno Arcade).

October 2011

Plover

Hesky Fisher starts working on Plover.

May 2012

Plover

Hesky takes over development of Plover, beginning by porting to Windows and Mac, as well as adding many more steno machine protocols, including Stentura, Tréal, and TX Bolt.

April 2013

Third-party

Brent Nesbitt releases StenoTray, a Java app that runs alongside Plover to watch your strokes and give outlines for what you might be trying to write.

July 2013

Plover

Hesky releases Plover 2.3.0 for Linux, Windows, and Mac.

Plover grows, with support for suffix folding, multiple dictionaries, stroke display, adding translations, orthography rules, and more.

August 2013

Education

Mike Neale introduces steno-training website QwertySteno.

Hardware

Josh Lifton announces plans to build an open source steno keyboard, the Stenosaurus.

September 2013

Education

Jay Liu introduces steno-training website Plover Dojo.

Education

Zach Brown, a technical writer, publishes the first half of Learn Plover!. Learn Plover! is a free online textbook that Mirabai commissioned Zach in exchange for steno lessons.

January 2014

Plover

Now at version 2.5.8, Hesky slows development to focus on other projects.

April 2014

Hardware

Emanuele Caruso announces the Stenoboard, an open source stenographic split 3D-printed keyboard.


Summer 2015

Plover

Mike Neale becomes an active contributor and adds many new features to Plover, including a dictionary editor and retro commands. No release is made.

August 2015

Plover

Hesky steps down from maintaining Plover. Mirabai starts looking for a new maintainer.

September 2015

Plover

Ted Morin begins work on Plover. Soon after beginning work, Benoit Pierre joins in and begins intense refactoring and improvement of the code base.

December 2015

Hardware

Scott Urueta announces and starts selling the SOFT/HRUF, an open source 3D-printed steno machine with light linear mechanical switches.

March 2016

Plover

"Weekly" releases (pre-releases) begin being published on GitHub for users wanting to try the new features. Given the two years passed since a release, there were bugs present in the code base that needed to be addressed.

Education

Steno Arcade crowd supply campaign goes live along with a demo. Project succeeds with 116% funding.

April 2016

Plover

Plover version 3.0.0 is released, featuring new training tools, a UI rearrangement, a dictionary editor, a new icon, output modes, and many under-the-hood improvements to improve cross-platform behavior.

September 2016

Hardware

Charley Shattuck starts to sell his customizable steno machine, the Stenomod. The Stenomod comes on a deck of wood for desk and lap use, but can be detached and used in split configuration.

October 2016

Education

Josh Grams introduces JavaScript-based drilling website Steno Jig.

November 2016

Plover

Plover version 3.1.0 is released.

Behind the scenes, Benoit Pierre performs major refactoring work to allow Plover to support other layouts and chording systems, user plugins, different GUIs (including a QT version), and Python 3. The project license is updated from GPLv2 to GPLv2+.

September 2016

Hardware

Charley Shattuck starts to sell his customizable steno machine, the Stenomod. The Stenomod comes on a deck of wood for desk and lap use, but can be detached and used in split configuration.

December 2016

Soft-to-Hard-ware

cemraJC, pre-releases version 0.1 of the StenoToppers! A preliminary project structure and a mockup of keyboard with CAD drawings for the keycaps was completed.

The thumb keycap was also completed.

The future - 2017 and onwards

Don't worry, Plover development continues. You can see the issues and feature requests on GitHub, join in the developer discussions by joining the Plover #devtalk forum, and/or watch out for news published on the blog.

Coming soon - Support for other layouts and chording systems, user plugins, and different GUIs.

July 2017

07 July 2017 T05:09:34Z

Soft-to-Hard-ware

StenoToppers! version 1.0 has been released! cemraJC, verifies test prints fit the CherryMX keycaps snugly, once they are properly fitted. See the fitting guide for more information.

September 2018

Textbook

Ted Morin a self-taught hobbyist stenographer, begins work on Art of Chording! The entire book was written and is being written, exclusively using stenography.

January 2019

Hardware

Jane from gBoards begins to sell the Georgi, a split mechanical keyboard designed for use with Plover.

February 2021

Hardware

Peter from StenoKeyboards starts to sell The Uni, a unibody split ortholinear mechanical keyboard for stenography.

April 2021

Hardware

Nathan and Lenno from Nolltronics releases the EcoSteno and starts to sell them.

July 2021

Plover

Plover version 4.0.0 is released with major design and software upgrades from 3.0.0. Most Plover users were already using the weekly/continous pre-release versions of 4.0.0. But July 2021 marks the time when it was officially released as a stable version.

January 2022

22nd January 2022

Open Steno / Plover Meetup

Events

This is a first-of-its-kind virtual meetup between the Open Steno community and a group of professional stenographic court reporters and realtime captioners. The goal of this event was to raise awareness of Open Steno initiatives among the professional stenographer community, and create networking opportunities between them and amateur stenographers in the Open Steno community.

June 2022

7th June 2022

Gaming

Paul Fioravanti shares world's first steno playthrough of Doom typist with his demon slaying steno machine, the Georgi.

August 2023

14 August 2023

Education

Di of didoesdigital completely rewrites the website's Stenography Lesson Generator

April 2024

15 April 2024

plover.wiki

plover.wiki recovers from a co-ordinated spam attack, of bots instructed to register without e-mail verification, periodically creating pages on the User: Namespace hoping to leech organic traffic to external websites. Through the swift action of the sysops & willing administrators of its time, the attack did not leave a lasting, damaging effect on the server.