People who often use computers know that there is a computer input method called "Microsoft Pinyin Chinese Character Input Method", which can greatly improve the input speed and benefit many users. Its inventor is Professor Wang Xiaolong from Shenzhen Graduate School of Harbin Institute of Technology.
Wang Xiaolong began to study Chinese character input technology as early as when he was a graduate student. How can the computer make the most effective information processing with a small amount of information input? He thinks that primary school students are often dictated when they study. If the computer input method can be replaced by the dictation simulation process, won't the whole sentence be output by inputting some information? Since people can understand a sentence and write it down accurately, so can computers with artificial intelligence. With this goal in mind, he began to devote himself to research.
The Chinese sentence input method developed by Wang Xiaolong took shape in the early 1990s. But in practice, it is found that its accuracy is only 60% to 70%, which is far from Wang Xiaolong's original idea.
The most complicated problems may require the simplest ideas. Wang Xiaolong thought about the process of primary school students' literacy-at first, they couldn't read, then they learned it, and we will know next time. He rewrote the program according to his own ideas and soon gained something. Xinfa now improves the accuracy of sentence input method to more than 90%.
1996, he reached an agreement with Microsoft Corporation of the United States to authorize Microsoft Corporation of the United States to use this technology on the Windows operating system, which is the widely used Microsoft Pinyin input method today.
1996, he finally realized that publicity was not his strong point, so he reached an agreement with Microsoft to authorize Microsoft in the United States to use this technology on the Windows operating system, which is the widely used Microsoft pinyin input method today. This is the only project developed by Microsoft in China so far.