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It’s Getting Kind of Haptic: Technical Writing in the Age of Tactile Interfaces

Recently I went to the Secrets of the Empire virtual reality (VR) experience (you can read about that here). It was a game environment mixing VR and physical elements. While there was a brief script introducing this team-based, first-person-shooter game, for the most part the participants operated without instructions. It’s supposed to be intuitive, with no need for written instructions or help to read. Video games and even movies have been moving computer and other interfaces in the direction of a world without documentation…or, seemingly, writing. Does a technical writer fit in such a world? Yes, but it’s not immediately obvious.

Manipulating Data (and Time) with Our Hands

In addition to my recent video game experience, several movies I’ve seen got me to thinking about how a technical writer is supposed to find work if people are using tactile (or haptic) interfaces to perform tasks. Examples include: Johnny Mnemonic (1995), Minority Report (2002), Iron Man (2008), and Avengers: Infinity War (2018).

Image source: Johnny Mnemonic

Image source: Minority Report

Image source: Iron Man

Image source: Avengers: Infinity War

Admittedly, in nearly all of these instances, the characters are working in a science-fictional/unreal environment. Johnny Mnemonic is working in a virtual internet akin to Second Life; John Anderton is working with a futuristic police database capable of predicting crimes in the future; Tony Stark is operating a super-duper mechanized suit of powered armor; and most intriguingly, Thanos uses a holographic, wrist-mounted interface (via the Time Stone) to manipulate time itself. Yet the expectation is there in all four instances: using physical gestures to perform computing and other activities…with few to no words required! 

What’s a tech writer to do in such a future?

The good news is, we’re not going away any time soon. We are not just physical beings but verbal creatures, and several of our fictional interfaces also include talking to a computer, which requires, yes, words, and scripts for the computer to use to respond to our commands. And we’ll be pushing nouns and verbs around for centuries to come.

The Opportunity

These types of computer interfaces are being designed for individuals who think or act more verbally (speaking) or kinesthetically (moving) than in literary form. Some folks are not comfortable with their typing or spelling skills to search for what they want. Instead, they ask Siri, Alexa, or some other virtual assistant. Being a reader, I prefer to use text, and in ten years of iPhone use, I have yet to activate the Siri, I’m certain much to the dismay of Apple’s programmers.

Regardless of your preferred form of interaction–text, voice, or gesture–will you as a technical communicator have a role in this increasingly less-text-oriented future? Yes.

The bottom line is that I believe there is still room for us, regardless of what the future Tony Starks of the world develop. The information can’t remain in the head of one person if others have to use it…and that is where the writer adds value.

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