Jef Raskin in The Humane Interface complained about that very problem.
He designed a whole user interaction paradigm to solve it, so that the system would always be in a state where your typed text would be registered, right there.
It goes well with the aphorism and commandment that "user input is sacred", which all current user interfaces disregard big time.
He designed a whole user interaction paradigm to solve it, so that the system would always be in a state where your typed text would be registered, right there.
It goes well with the aphorism and commandment that "user input is sacred", which all current user interfaces disregard big time.