User`s guide

54 Chapter 04: Using Your Sahara NetSlate with Microsoft® Windows® 7
Using Gestures to Improve Productivity
When using Windows® 7 on a standard laptop or desktop PC,
many people take advantage of added eciency provided
by keyboard short-cuts. Tablet PC users have another way to
improve eciency while working by using Windows® 7 built-in
screen gestures to open applications, close applications, move
data between applications, and navigate within applications.
Windows has two dierent types of gestures depending on the
type of input screen used: pen gestures and touch gestures.
Pen Gestures
In the world of pen computing, a gesture is a quick movement
of the pen that invokes specic short-cut actions normally
completed by the press of a key on a keyboard. For example, you
can enter a space, you can delete text and you can enter a line
return. These actions are accomplished in the Input Panel.
At the top on the input panel, just to the left of the close button,
is a button that shows how to accomplish a series of gestures.
Tap on an individual gesture to display a short movie that
demonstrates how to perform the gesture.
Another series of gestures you can invoke with a pen are known
as “icks”. There are two categories of icks, navigational icks
and editing icks and are used independently of the input panel
anywhere in Windows.
Navigational Flicks
There are four default navigational pen icks in Windows® 7:
Flick Direction Action Performed
Up Page Up
Right Back
Down Page Down
Left Forward