The Practice Test for Typing and Data Entry

English Typing Test Paragraphs

Stimulate your mind as you test your typing speed with this standard English paragraph typing test. Watch your typing speed and accuracy increase as you learn about a variety of new topics! Over 40 typing test selections available.

If you don't like a test prompt, you can get a different (random) prompt with the "change test" button - or select a specific paragraph to type from the list below. To find out how fast you type, just start typing in the blank textbox on the right of the test prompt. You will see your progress, including errors on the left side as you type. In order to complete the test and save your score, you need to get 100% accuracy. You can fix errors as you go, or correct them at the end with the help of the spell checker.

Personalized Feedback

This feedback graph will follow you from page to page for your typing session. You can see more details by mousing over the graph. The session is reset when the tab on your browser is closed.

Type this... CHANGE TEST

Test begins when you start typing..., check your wpm typing speed here.

To find out how fast you type, just start typing in the blank textbox on the right of the test prompt. You will see your progress, including errors on the left side as you type.

You can fix errors as you go, or correct them at the end with the help of the spell checker. If you need to restart the test, delete the text in the text box. Interactive feedback shows you your current wpm and accuracy.

In order to complete the test and share your results, you need to get 100% accuracy. You can review your progress for this session with the feedback chart. Just hover over a dot to see what your average speed and accruacy are for that key.

Letter Drills

A | b | c | d | e | f | g | h | i | j | k | l | m | n | o | p | q | r | s | t | u | v | w | x | y | z.

Basic Data Entry Test

Select a Specific Typing Test:

Click on a topic to use it as your test prompt. Selections are ranked according to difficulty from '*' (easiest typing tests) to '*****' (most challenging typing tests). For more details, check the difficulty key at the bottom of the page.

Short typing tests for beginners: (1 - 3 minute typing test at < 30 wpm)

  • Virtual Assistant (38.4 words) ****
  • Closed Captions (56.2 words) **
  • Teachers (70.2 words) ****
  • Business Casual (74 words) ***
  • Paralegals (76.4 words) *
  • Web Designers (77 words) ***
  • Medical Transcription (82.6 words) ***
  • Thumbing (83 words) ***
  • Engineers (84.4 words) ****
  • Translation (88 words) ***

Intermediate typing tests: (3-6 minutes at 40 wpm)

  • Proofreaders (90 words) **
  • Typing Styles (91.8 words) ***
  • Typing Speed in WPM (100.4 words) ***
  • Keyboard Shortcuts (104 words) *
  • Buffer Method of Typing (105 words) **
  • Transcription Service (107.4 words) ***
  • Data Entry Clerks (112.4 words) **
  • Hunt and Peck (128.2 words) **
  • Touch Type (132.2 words) **
  • Sales Methodologies (135.4 words) ***
  • Invention of Touch Typing (147.4 words) ***
  • Typing Speed Records (166.8 words) ****
  • Comparing Typing Speed and Methods (169.2 words) ***
  • Pharmacists (172.4 words) ***
  • Editing (175.2 words) ***
  • History of Flight (175.4 words) ****
  • HR Management (177.4 words) ****
  • Transcription Services (187.4 words) ****
  • Motivation (192.4 words) ***
  • Freelancers (194.6 words) ***
  • Average Typing Speeds (195.2 words) ****

Hard typing tests for advanced typists: (over 4 minutes at 60+ wpm)

  • Word Processors (203.8 words) ***
  • Class Reunion Report (211 words) ***
  • Financial Reporting (221.2 words) *****
  • Biking Story (233.6 words) *
  • Event Description (233.8 words) *
  • New York Stock Exchange (234.6 words) **
  • Career Choice Article (236.6 words) *
  • Self Confidence Article (244.8 words) ***
  • FDA Article (246.8 words) ***
  • Competitive Typing (250.4 words) ***
  • Academic Success Article (256.6 words) **
  • Emotions Article (272.8 words) **
  • MBA Article (276 words) ****

If you have a topic that you would like to see added to the list above, please feel free to contact us with your suggestion for a new paragraph typing test.

Typing Test Difficulty Levels

Our typing tests are ranked on level of difficulty. The algorithm to calculate difficulty depends on the average word length and how many special characters like capitals, numbers and symbols are included in the text. Most standard pre-employment typing tests will be in the normal range. You should expect to get higher wpm scores on easier tests and lower wpm scores on the more difficult tests.

  • * Very Easy Typing Test
  • ** Easy Typing Test
  • *** Normal Typing Test
  • **** Difficult Typing Test
  • ***** Very Difficult Typing Test

typing test ad image

Share your success... challenge your friends!

Typing Lessons

Take a typing speed test, learn to type faster and with fewer errors with this free online typing tutor.

Test your typing online by practicing on your favorite literature. Choose a book below to get started, or subscribe and import your own!

  • Improve your typing speed and accuracy in multiple languages
  • Sign in, track your progress, and level up as you learn to type faster and better
  • Tap into mindfulness — reduce stress and improve focus
  • Do not include content that contains any libelous or otherwise unlawful, abusive or obscene text.
  • Verify quotes added aren't duplicates of any already present
  • Please do not add extremely short quotes (less than 60 characters)
  • Submitting low quality quotes or misusing this form will cause you to lose access to this feature

https://github.com/

https://twitter.com/

monkey see monkeytype

distribution of time 60 leaderboard results (wpm)

Monkeytype is a minimalistic and customizable typing test. It features many test modes, an account system to save your typing speed history, and user-configurable features such as themes, sounds, a smooth caret, and more. Monkeytype attempts to emulate the experience of natural keyboard typing during a typing test, by unobtrusively presenting the text prompts and displaying typed characters in-place, providing straightforward, real-time feedback on typos, speed, and accuracy. Test yourself in various modes, track your progress and improve your speed.

By default, this website uses the most common 200 words in the English language to generate its tests. You can change to an expanded set (1000 most common words) in the options, or change the language entirely.

You can use tab and enter (or just tab if you have quick tab mode enabled) to restart the typing test. Open the command line by pressing ctrl/cmd + shift + p or esc - there you can access all the functionality you need without touching your mouse

wpm - total number of characters in the correctly typed words (including spaces), divided by 5 and normalised to 60 seconds.

raw wpm - calculated just like wpm, but also includes incorrect words.

acc - percentage of correctly pressed keys.

char - correct characters / incorrect characters. Calculated after the test has ended.

consistency - based on the variance of your raw wpm. Closer to 100% is better. Calculated using the coefficient of variation of raw wpm and mapped onto a scale from 0 to 100.

After completing a test you will be able to see your wpm, raw wpm, accuracy, character stats, test length, leaderboards info and test info. (you can hover over some values to get floating point numbers). You can also see a graph of your wpm and raw over the duration of the test. Remember that the wpm line is a global average, while the raw wpm line is a local, momentary value. (meaning if you stop, the value is 0)

If you encounter a bug, or have a feature request - join the Discord server, send me an email, a direct message on Twitter or create an issue on GitHub.

Thanks to everyone who has supported this project. It would not be possible without you and your continued support.

If you encounter a bug, have a feature request or just want to say hi - here are the different ways you can contact me directly.

Montydrei  for the name suggestion

Everyone  who provided valuable feedback on the original reddit post for the prototype of this website

Supporters who helped financially by donating, enabling optional ads or buying merch

Contributors  on GitHub that have helped with implementing various features, adding themes and more

Login/Signup is disabled.

You are using an outdated browser. Please upgrade your browser to improve your experience.

You're writing your first blank slate!

Here are the most important things when writing blank slates.

  • First: Bookmark this page ( + d). Each time you need to write something down, click the bookmark and just start typing!
  • Style your slates with markdown . Here's an example and the result when viewed
  • To save, press " + s" at any time or click "save" in the bottom right
  • To save as a Google Doc, press " + g"
  • To download as a PDF, press " + p"

Style your notes with Markdown

  • Titles: #This will be a title (##this is a sub-title)
  • Bold ( + b): **this will be bold**
  • Italics ( + i): *italics*
  • Link: [click here](https://source-url.com)
  • - this starts a list
  •     * sub-list item 1
  •     * sub-list item 2

Keyboard shortcuts

  • + s: Save your note
  • + g: Save as Google Doc
  • + p: Download as a PDF
  • To publish as a blog, just use a #title at the top and then "publish" on the view-note screen
  • Markdown Info Close

Create a user or save note as a guest? Hint: guests can not access their notes on other devices and will lose notes if they clear their cookies.

  • signup with google signup for permanent user continue as guest
  • signup for permanent user continue as guest

It's time to write your

Don't stress about deadlines. Write better with Yomu and simplify your academic life.

Explore features

Step into the future of the academic writing with Yomu

Never get stuck at writing your essay

Use an intelligent Document Assistant to help write entire sections and give you feedback.

Your personal essay copilot

Elevate your essay writing with an AI autocomplete that completes your sentences and paragraphs.

Edit your paper like a pro

Leverage AI to brainstorm and refine your paper: paraphrase, expand, shorten, summarize, and transform bullet points into detailed text.

Cite papers with ease

Easily find, include, and format citations in your paper with our AI-powered citation tool powered by Sourcely .

Ensure your work is original and uphold academic integrity.

Evaluate your work with an advanced plagiarism checker and gain insights on how to maintain originality and authenticity ( Ethics Statement ).

Yomu is loved by the users

Power your academic writing with yomu ai.

Save time writing your next essay or research paper with Yomu

Still thinking? There's even more

Authentic, original, genuine.

Get ahead of AI detectors and ensure your work is original and authentic.

Powerful AI commands

Edit, brainstorm, and write with our powerful AI commands.

Yomu lets you easily add, caption and reference figures in the text.

Grammar & text improvements

Write flawlessly with the help of our grammar & text improvement checker.

Yomu lets you easily create, modify, caption and reference tables in the text.

Submit desired features

We are not stopping here, review our roadmap, frequently asked questions.

Yomu is an AI-powered writing assistant that helps you write better essays, papers, and academic writing. Simply start typing and Yomu will generate suggestions for you to use in your writing. You can also use Yomu to generate entire paragraphs or sections. Yomu also helps find citations, references, and sources for you to use in your writing. You can make sure that your writing is plagiarism-free by using Yomu's plagiarism checker.

Incorrect words Characters marked red do not match the expected character. Greyed out characters were not typed at all. Hover over the word to see the expected word.

No incorrect words have been registered yet.

About TypeFast.io

TypeFast.io was created by me, Casper Verswijvelt, with versatility and minimalism in mind. Many type-test sites have either cluttered/ugly user interfaces or skimp out on features.

With TypeFast.io I wanted to create something that had all the positives from other applicationsm, but none of the negatives. It's up to you to decide if I succeeded doing that, or not.

If you have any suggestions or feedback, be sure to check out the 'Feedback tab'.

TypeFast.io is a side project that I work on in my free time. Domain and hosting costs are paid for by myself and I do not plan on running ads (it would ruin the design). If you enjoy this site and would like to support it's future development, you can do so by donating via the button below.

If you have any feedback, want to report a bug or want to request a feature, please join the TypeFast.io discord page.

Here you will also find changelogs and other useful information about TypeFast.io!

website for typing essays

You can also leave feedback by just filling in this Google form

This project is open-source!

If you have any issues or want to contribute to the project by fixing bugs, improving existing features or implementing new features, be sure to check out this project on GitHub!

website for typing essays

TypeFast.io - Release notes

1.0.12 - 2022-12-21.

  • Added Uyghur language, thanks Waris Ruzi !

1.0.11 - 2022-11-12

Improvements.

  • Added sentences to Italian language, thanks nuzguy !

1.0.10 - 2022-03-06

  • Updated to Angular 13
  • Added sentences to Portuguese language, thanks N i k a o!

1.0.9 - 2021-11-06

  • Added words and sentences to Portuguese language, thanks Lawliet!
  • Add accented characters for 'Ignore accented characters' mode in Portuguese language

1.0.8 - 2021-10-30

  • Added literature texts and tongue twisters to Russian sentences mode, thanks talkenson !
  • Added Indonesian language
  • Update dependencies

1.0.7 - 2021-06-07

  • Add new 'English(200)' language with 200 most common English words (Thanks for the suggestion!)

1.0.6 - 2021-03-29

  • Set default theme to dark
  • Update Angular

1.0.5 - 2020-12-04

  • Added sentences and 'ignore accents' characters for Spanish language, thanks guillemglez !
  • Added Catalan language, thanks guillemglez !
  • Remove incorrect words with special characters from all languages
  • Fix error in German 'ignore accents' mode
  • Fix small transition issue when closing preferences pane
  • Fix small typo in README

1.0.4 - 2020-09-27

Add option to disable animations during text scrolling

Added sentences for French language, thanks RyFax !

Added Romanian language, currently only words

Added option to ignore accented characters in word validation: this is language sensitive. For example, in French, the letter 'á' can be typed as 'a' and still be counted as correct when this setting is enabled.

Currently this settings supports:

  • Russian (ë)
  • French (â,à,á,é,è,ë,ê,ì,î,ï,ù,û,ü,ç)
  • Arabic (أ,إ,آ,ة,ؤ,ئ,ى)
  • Romanian (â,ă,î,ș,ț)
  • Dutch (é,è,ë,ê,ü,ç)
  • German (ä,ö,ü,ß (typed as 's'))

Added option to ignore casing in word validation

  • Disable backspace going to previous page on firefox when pressing after test finish
  • Added placeholder sentence for the 'Programming' language
  • No longer count an inbetween space character as a correct character if the word before was not correct
  • Changed 'heer' to 'here' in American English, thanks fishstik !

1.0.3 - 2020-09-09

  • Add changelog tab in info popup
  • Added link to google feedback form in info window
  • Removed words with accented characters from English language
  • Improved preferences menu and loading of languages

1.0.2 - 2020-08-31

  • Added a changelog file, check it out here
  • Fixed typo in README.md ('screenshtos')
  • Fixed bug where you FireFox users would need to tab twice to select the reset button
  • Remove ugly tab outline on active reset, increase timer and decrease timer buttons (but keep focus outline for accesibility)
  • Split up up the english language into British English and American English

1.0.1 - 2020-08-30

  • Smooth scrolling is here! You can still change back to the old per-word scrolling in the preferences
  • Added option to change text size between 3 levels in the preferences
  • Fixed text not becoming smaller on mobile layouts larger than 400px wide
  • Fixed japanese (full-width) space not completing a word
  • Fixed height of uncollapsed preference groups not being exactly perfect
  • Fix typo 'sententes' in Word mode preference

1.0.0 - 2020-08-09

  • Officially released on reddit

Check your typing skills in a minute

Train typing skills.

What if you could type as fluently as you speak? Typing Trainer web course will get you there!

Play Typing Games

Now the joy starts! Play our numerous fun typing games to become a true keyboard master.

TypeTastic for Schools

Discover 700+ typing activities for all grade levels - and unleash the joy of typing in your school.

Typing Certificate Now Online

A certificate has been one of the most requested features, and we're happy to announce that a test with a printable certificate is now available! The certification test consists of 5 minutes of typing predefined source text in English. Read more..

Join the Worldwide Typing League

Compete against other talented typists around the globe and show where the best typists come from. Each country has its own league and you can advance higher in the rankings by completing races and collecting points. Start the Race!

Free online proofreading and essay editor

A reliable proofreading tool and essay editor for any writer or student, a complete environment.

Typely is more than just a proofreading tool. It's a complete writing environment.

Thousands of checks

More than a thousand checks are being performed and we've only scratched the surface.

Inspired by the greatest writers

Gain access to humanity’s collective understanding about the craft of writing.

A proofreading tool that does not bark at every tree

Typely is precise. Existing tools for proofreading raise so many false alarms that their advice cannot be trusted. Instead, the writer must carefully consider whether to accept or reject each change.

We aim for a tool so precise that it becomes possible to unquestioningly adopt its recommendations and still come out ahead — with stronger, tighter prose. Better to be quiet and authoritative than loud and unreliable.

Relax, focus, write your next masterpiece...

Writing presumes more than simply laying out words on a paper. Typely helps you get in the mood and keeps you focused, immersed and ready to write your story.

Whether you need a distraction-free environment, some chill relaxing sounds or a pomodoro timer to manage your time we got you covered.

Got questions? We have answers.

No. Typely is completely free and we plan on keeping it that way. We are considering some advanced features however that might be available under a premium plan.

The only limit we have applied thus far is on the number of characters you can submit and that is being set at a maximum of 50,000.

In theory yes but that will require a lot of work and professionals dedicated for this job. We are considering a way of letting the community participate somehow.

Typely does not do grammar checking because it's hard and almost impossible to get right. The aim for Typely is to be precise and reliable.

Your path to academic success

Improve your paper with our award-winning Proofreading Services ,  Plagiarism Checker , Citation Generator , AI Detector & Knowledge Base .

Thesis proofreading service

Proofreading & Editing

Get expert help from Scribbr’s academic editors, who will proofread and edit your essay, paper, or dissertation to perfection.

Plagiarism checker

Plagiarism Checker

Detect and resolve unintentional plagiarism with the Scribbr Plagiarism Checker, so you can submit your paper with confidence.

APA Citation Generator

Citation Generator

Generate accurate citations with Scribbr’s free citation generator and save hours of repetitive work.

website for typing essays

Happy to help you

You’re not alone. Together with our team and highly qualified editors , we help you answer all your questions about academic writing.

Open 24/7 – 365 days a year. Always available to help you.

Very satisfied students

This is our reason for working. We want to make  all students  happy, every day.

The editor gave me comprehensive…

The editor gave me comprehensive instructions.

the editor Tanvi has taken seriously my…

the editor Tanvi has taken seriously my writings.

Scribbr is not just for students

I very much appreciate the professional way in which the manuscript for my book was edited. It is a great comfort that Scribbr exists, and I can recommend it to students but also to experienced academics

A pleasant journey to see all the editing and suggestions provided

As a loyal customer, very happy to see all the editing made!

Next stop, dissertation!

They informed me of the process as it was evolving. They met the deadline and gave me great ideas for improving my paper. I felt the kindness and knowledge of my editor through the editing markings. The experience left me feeling more confident in myself and that I can trust them to have my back. I will entrust them with my dissertation.

Scribbr hold their promise of 100% satisfaction guarantee. They responded quickly on my complains and gave a solution to my problem. ve

Scribbr hold their promise of 100% satisfaction guarantee. They responded quickly on my complains and gave a solution to my problem. Thank you for this.

Very good bajajsvajajwnnss

Very helpful

Very helpful, constructive comments!

Easy, fast and elegant too

A really great experience with Scribbr - I needed to get a second proofreader to finish proofing my PhD thesis due to the illness of my initial editor. I was a bit nervous about sending off only two disconnected sections of the document, but the system allowed me to a) choose what pages to submit (so I actually hadn't needed to prep a special partial document), and b) give some context to the editor. It was all very clear. Neshika did a fantastic job, and even delivered a little early on a rush-job deadline. Her comments were professional but human, with a clear sense of her personality coming through and she explained the principles behind changes very clearly. Her edits not only improved clarity, but were elegantly worded too. Worth every penny. Thank you!

based on the study

great experience they helped me with my…

great experience they helped me with my paper and lost my cat

I like it way better than…

I like it way better than citationmachine.net on citation machine you cant even create a citation without something popping up then you click out of it and you lose everything you put in it to create the citation. and something popping up, not even a second after you click out of it to go back to creating the citation.

Trusted. This is my 7th manuscript submission to Scribbr and they helped me a lot in improving the quality of my English. The editor also provides several tips that need to be considered in order to clarify sentences. Happy working with scribbr.

Thanks to the editor

Alexandra edited my sloppy text with great attention. She propose how to clarify a lot of vague places. She made me valuable notes to think about sense and language of my text. Her help significantly improved my text, not only in terms of language, but also in its sence, so I thank her very much.

Outstanding job!

The individual who proofread my paper provided great feedback. I am very grateful for the amount of time spent reviewing and critiquing the document. I would love to use him again. Thanks so much.

A Surprisingly Personalized Touch: Beyond Expectations with Doug

I was nervous about utilizing an online service because I assumed the edits would be stiff and not aligned with my tone and writing style. However, the edits were insightful and very much aligned with my style. I would recommend this service to everyone! My editor, Doug, was exceptional AND I received it 3 days early! Thank you!

nnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnn

It smells good

Very clear instruction on what I'm…

Very clear instruction on what I'm supposed to do in the document.

Thank You! You did a great job!

Everything you need to write an A-grade paper

Free resources used by 5,000,000 students every month.

Bite-sized videos that guide you through the writing process. Get the popcorn, sit back, and learn!

Video 1.5x

Lecture slides

Ready-made slides for teachers and professors that want to kickstart their lectures.

  • Academic writing
  • Citing sources
  • Methodology
  • Research process
  • Dissertation structure
  • Language rules

Accessible how-to guides full of examples that help you write a flawless essay, proposal, or dissertation.

paper

Chrome extension

Cite any page or article with a single click right from your browser.

Time-saving templates that you can download and edit in Word or Google Docs.

Template 1.5x

Help you achieve your academic goals

Whether we’re proofreading and editing , checking for plagiarism or AI content , generating citations, or writing useful Knowledge Base articles , our aim is to support students on their journey to become better academic writers.

We believe that every student should have the right tools for academic success. Free tools like a paraphrasing tool , grammar checker, summarizer and an  AI Proofreader . We pave the way to your academic degree.

Ask our team

Want to contact us directly? No problem.  We  are always here for you.

Support team - Nina

Frequently asked questions

Our team helps students graduate by offering:

  • A world-class citation generator
  • Plagiarism Checker software powered by Turnitin
  • Innovative Citation Checker software
  • Professional proofreading services
  • Over 300 helpful articles about academic writing, citing sources, plagiarism, and more

Scribbr specializes in editing study-related documents . We proofread:

  • PhD dissertations
  • Research proposals
  • Personal statements
  • Admission essays
  • Motivation letters
  • Reflection papers
  • Journal articles
  • Capstone projects

Scribbr’s Plagiarism Checker is powered by elements of Turnitin’s Similarity Checker , namely the plagiarism detection software and the Internet Archive and Premium Scholarly Publications content databases .

The add-on AI detector is powered by Scribbr’s proprietary software.

The Scribbr Citation Generator is developed using the open-source Citation Style Language (CSL) project and Frank Bennett’s citeproc-js . It’s the same technology used by dozens of other popular citation tools, including Mendeley and Zotero.

You can find all the citation styles and locales used in the Scribbr Citation Generator in our publicly accessible repository on Github .

To revisit this article, visit My Profile, then View saved stories .

  • Backchannel
  • Newsletters
  • WIRED Insider
  • WIRED Consulting

Estelle Erasmus

How to Resist the Temptation of AI When Writing

Red laptop displaying chat bubbles

Whether you're a student, a journalist, or a business professional, knowing how to do high-quality research and writing using trustworthy data and sources, without giving in to the temptation of AI or ChatGPT , is a skill worth developing.

As I detail in my book Writing That Gets Noticed , locating credible databases and sources and accurately vetting information can be the difference between turning a story around quickly or getting stuck with outdated information.

For example, several years ago the editor of Parents.com asked for a hot-take reaction to country singer Carrie Underwood saying that, because she was 35, she had missed her chance at having another baby. Since I had written about getting pregnant in my forties, I knew that as long as I updated my facts and figures, and included supportive and relevant peer-reviewed research, I could pull off this story. And I did.

The story ran later that day , and it led to other assignments. Here are some tips I’ve learned that you should consider mastering before you turn to automated tools like generative AI to handle your writing work for you.

Identify experts, peer-reviewed research study authors, and sources who can speak with authority—and ideally, offer easily understood sound bites or statistics on the topic of your work. Great sources include professors at major universities and media spokespeople at associations and organizations.

For example, writer and author William Dameron pinned his recent essay in HuffPost Personal around a statistic from the American Heart Association on how LGBTQ people experience higher rates of heart disease based on discrimination. Although he first found the link in a secondary source (an article in The New York Times ), he made sure that he checked the primary source: the original study that the American Heart Association gleaned the statistic from. He verified the information, as should any writer, because anytime a statistic is cited in a secondary source, errors can be introduced.

Jen Malia, author of  The Infinity Rainbow Club  series of children’s books (whom I recently interviewed on my podcast ), recently wrote a piece about dinosaur-bone hunting for Business Insider , which she covers in her book Violet and the Jurassic Land Exhibit.

After a visit to the Carnegie Museum of Natural History in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Malia, whose books are set in Philadelphia, found multiple resources online and on the museum site that gave her the history of the Bone Wars , information on the exhibits she saw, and the scientific names of the dinosaurs she was inspired by. She also used the Library of Congress’ website, which offers digital collections and links to the Library of Congress Newspaper Collection.

Malia is a fan of searching for additional resources and citable documents with Google Scholar . “If I find that a secondary source mentions a newspaper article, I’m going to go to the original newspaper article, instead of just stopping there and quoting,” she says.

How an iPhone Powered by Google’s Gemini AI Might Work

Boone Ashworth

Lenovo’s 12th-Gen ThinkPad X1 Carbon Is Too Dang Expensive

Christopher Null

Q Acoustics’s Superb New M40 Speakers Prove Bigger Isn’t Always Better

Chris Haslam

The 15 Best Electric Bikes for Every Kind of Ride

Adrienne So

Your local public library is a great source of free information, journals, and databases (even ones that generally require a subscription and include embargoed research). For example, your search should include everything from health databases ( Sage Journals , Scopus , PubMed) to databases for academic sources and journalism ( American Periodical Series Online , Statista , Academic Search Premier ) and databases for news, trends, market research, and polls (t he Harris Poll , Pew Research Center , Newsbank , ProPublica ).

Even if you find a study or paper that you can’t access in one of those databases, consider reaching out to the study’s lead author or researcher. In many cases, they’re happy to discuss their work and may even share the study with you directly and offer to talk about their research.

For journalist Paulette Perhach’s article on ADHD in The New York Times, she used Epic Research to see “dual team studies.” That's when two independent teams address the same topic or question, and ideally come to the same conclusions. She recommends locating research and experts via key associations for your topic. She also likes searching via Google Scholar but advises filtering it for studies and research in recent years to avoid using old data. She suggests keeping your links and research organized. “Always be ready to be peer-reviewed yourself,” Perhach says.

When you are looking for information for a story or project, you might be inclined to start with a regular Google search. But keep in mind that the internet is full of false information, and websites that look trustworthy can sometimes turn out to be businesses or companies with a vested interest in you taking their word as objective fact without additional scrutiny. Regardless of your writing project, unreliable or biased sources are a great way to torpedo your work—and any hope of future work.

Author Bobbi Rebell researched her book Launching Financial Grownups using the IRS’ website . “I might say that you can contribute a certain amount to a 401K, but it might be outdated because those numbers are always changing, and it’s important to be accurate,” she says. “AI and ChatGPT can be great for idea generation,” says Rebell, “but you have to be careful. If you are using an article someone was quoted in, you don’t know if they were misquoted or quoted out of context.”

If you use AI and ChatGPT for sourcing, you not only risk introducing errors, you risk introducing plagiarism—there is a reason OpenAI, the company behind ChatGPT, is being sued for downloading information from all those books.

Audrey Clare Farley, who writes historical nonfiction, has used a plethora of sites for historical research, including Women Also Know History , which allows searches by expertise or area of study, and JSTOR , a digital library database that offers a number of free downloads a month. She also uses Chronicling America , a project from the Library of Congress which gathers old newspapers to show how a historical event was reported, and Newspapers.com (which you can access via free trial but requires a subscription after seven days).

When it comes to finding experts, Farley cautions against choosing the loudest voices on social media platforms. “They might not necessarily be the most authoritative. I vet them by checking if they have a history of publication on the topic, and/or educational credentials.”

When vetting an expert, look for these red flags:

  • You can’t find their work published or cited anywhere.
  • They were published in an obscure journal.
  • Their research is funded by a company, not a university, or they are the spokesperson for the company they are doing research for. (This makes them a public relations vehicle and not an appropriate source for journalism.)

And finally, the best endings for virtually any writing, whether it’s an essay, a research paper, an academic report, or a piece of investigative journalism, circle back to the beginning of the piece, and show your reader the transformation or the journey the piece has presented in perspective.

As always, your goal should be strong writing supported by research that makes an impact without cutting corners. Only then can you explore tools that might make the job a little easier, for instance by generating subheads or discovering a concept you might be missing—because then you'll have the experience and skills to see whether it's harming or helping your work.

You Might Also Like …

In your inbox: Introducing Politics Lab , your guide to election season

Google used her to tout diversity. Now she’s suing for discrimination

Our in-house physics whiz explains how heat pumps work

The big questions the Pentagon’s new UFO report fails to answer

AirPods Pro or AirPods Max? These are the best Apple buds for your ears

Google’s GenAI Bots Are Struggling. But So Are Its Humans

Michael Calore

Google Podcasts Is Gone. Here’s How to Transfer Your Subscriptions

Reece Rogers

Is Your Gmail Inbox Full? Here’s How To Clear Out Some Space

WIRED COUPONS

https://www.wired.com/coupons/static/shop/30208/logo/_0047_Dyson--coupons.png

Dyson promo code: 20% off all purchases + free shipping

https://www.wired.com/coupons/static/shop/31565/logo/GoPro_Logo_-_WIRED_-_8.png

GoPro Promo Code: 15% off Cameras and Accessories

https://www.wired.com/coupons/static/shop/30173/logo/Samsung_promo_code.png

Up to +30% Off with your Samsung promo code

https://www.wired.com/coupons/static/shop/30178/logo/_0049_Dell-coupons.png

10% Off Everything w/ Dell Coupon Code

https://www.wired.com/coupons/static/shop/32722/logo/VistaPrint_promo_code.png

Take $10 off $100+ with VistaPrint promo code

https://www.wired.com/coupons/static/shop/30169/logo/newegg_logo.png

15% off Sitewide - Newegg promo code

Winners of national penmanship contest crowned as handwriting is 'having a moment'

Namuun Baasanbol poses for a photo with her handwriting.

It’s regarded, hands down, as the Super Bowl of penmanship tournaments.

The Zaner-Bloser National Handwriting Contest, now in its 33rd year, crowned its 2024 grand champions on Monday, rewarding nine students from six states for their picture-perfect letters.

Ten-year old Zita Miller of White Bear Lake, Minnesota, took top honors in the fifth grade category. Her winning submission was one of the contest’s 80,000 entries.

“I like handwriting because it’s like art, drawing swirls and vines and curls,” Miller said, adding that she enjoys penning original mystery stories by hand.

Zita Miller poses for a photograph.

Namuun Baasanbold, from Carmel, Indiana, was named grand champion in the first grade category, and said she likes to give handwritten “love notes” to family and friends.

“Writing by hand makes me feel special,” she said.

The contest celebrates a centuries-old practice, but the victories come as handwriting is experiencing a kind of renaissance in the U.S. In January, California became the 22nd state to require cursive to be taught in schools — a significant jump from 2016, when just 12 states mandated it.

At the same time, various studies published over the past decade have detailed how writing with pencil and paper can benefit memory, cognitive development, reading comprehension and fine motor skills.

“Handwriting is definitely having a moment,” said Sharon Quirk-Silva, a member of the California state Assembly who sponsored the bill. She said she heard from people from all over the country who penned “beautifully handwritten notes” of support for the new law.

“We live in a very polarized nation. So many issues are contentious. But with this handwriting bill, we had full bipartisan support and goodwill. The importance of handwriting is something people seem to agree on,” she said.

Quirk-Silva said she backed the bill, in large part, because of her own experience — before becoming a lawmaker, she taught elementary school for 25 years.

“For years, technology has been taking over the curriculum in schools, with many kids being dormant in front of the screen, using two or three screens a day. Now, there’s a feeling of, ‘Let’s get pens and pencils back in kids’ hands,’” she said.

Although the California law mandates that first through sixth graders in the state receive cursive instruction, Quirk-Silva said she believes that writing by hand — in print or cursive — is an important language arts tool.

“It’s a way of slowing down a little bit, taking your thoughts from your brain to your hand and physically doing the writing,” she said.

Sophia Vinci-Booher, an assistant professor of psychology and human development at Vanderbilt University, said her research found that writing by hand enabled preschool students to form connections in the brain that likely support early letter recognition.

For that study , published in 2016, 20 children were asked to practice certain letters by writing them over and over, and practice others by pressing a button.

“Then we asked the children to go into an MRI scanner and look at those letters they’d been practicing,” Vinci-Booher explained. Her team analyzed the children’s brain activity to assess the functional connectivity between different areas of their brains.

“We found that the connection was stronger with letters they wrote by hand than those they tapped,” she said.

The research underscores the importance of the physical act of forming symbols, Vinci-Booher added.

“Writing by hand is a good thing for kids because it supports early reading development and it engages the fine motor system, which is developmentally important,” she said.

A 2021 study measured people’s brain activity during a memory task, this time finding that University of Tokyo students exhibited stronger activity and better recall after they had written information down on paper than when they did on a smartphone or even with a stylus on a tablet. The researchers suggested that the physical act of writing on paper provides the brain more details that trigger memory, and concluded that using paper notebooks can help students retain information in part because of their “tangible permanence.”

A similar study published in January compared the brain activity of students at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology who took notes by hand to the activity of those who typed their notes. The findings suggested that the students who wrote by hand had higher levels of electrical activity across a wide range of brain regions responsible for sensory processing and memory.

The results come as little surprise to many educators.

“I’ve seen firsthand that the kids learn more when they write by hand,” said Geeta Kadakia, who teaches second through fifth grade at the DAV Montessori School in Houston. “The lightbulb goes off through those achievements in handwriting, and handwriting leads to achievements in other areas, even math. When students make their numbers more neatly, their math scores improve.”

Laura Gajderowicz taught elementary school for 33 years in Indiana before retiring in 2022. She said she worried as she watched handwriting take a back seat to technology in U.S. classrooms in the early 2000s.

“Writing by hand does so much to help with the development of a student’s eye-hand coordination,” Gajderowicz said, adding: “I’m not against technology — I just think there’s a place at the table for both technology and handwriting when it comes to learning.”

This year, Gajderowicz served as a regional judge in the Zaner-Bloser contest.

“I was pleasantly surprised to see how many entries we had, especially from children in the upper grades,” she said.

Gajderowicz selected winners using criteria that analyzed the mechanics and precision of the letters students wrote, including their shapes, sizes, slant and spacing.

Contestants were asked to write the sentence, “The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog,” because it includes the entire alphabet, as well as a sentence explaining why handwriting makes them a better reader and writer.

Namuun Baasanbold’s entry.

Baasanbold said she was “over the moon” to find out she won: “I screamed and celebrated with friends at a restaurant with pizza and an appetizer and a sundae for dessert,” she said.

Her prizes include a trophy and $500 — plus bragging rights.

“I like to use my handwriting to impress people,” she said.

Mary Pflum is a national field producer for NBC News, based in New York.

The Supreme Court Is Shaming Itself

No good legal reason exists to delay Donald Trump’s January 6 trial any further.

Picture of Trump

Listen to this article

Produced by ElevenLabs and News Over Audio (NOA) using AI narration.

Sign up for The Decision , a newsletter featuring our 2024 election coverage.

Donald Trump is determined to avoid accountability before the general election, and, so far, the U.S. Supreme Court is helping him.

Trump has no legal ground whatsoever to delay a ruling in his plea for presidential immunity. The reason Trump has nevertheless sought to slow down the immunity appeals process is obvious: to postpone the trial date, hopefully pushing it into a time when, as president, he would control the Department of Justice and thus could quash the prosecution altogether. The Supreme Court has shamed itself by being a party to this, when the sole issue before the Court is presidential immunity. By contrast, Special Counsel Jack Smith has both law and policy on his side in seeking a prompt determination on immunity and a speedy trial soon thereafter. Yet the Court has ignored all that.

David A. Graham: The cases against Trump–a guide

The Supreme Court’s lollygagging is reflected in its scheduling the immunity case for a leisurely April 25 hearing. It’s too late to do anything about that now, but the Court has an opportunity to correct course following oral argument. The justices should press Trump’s counsel on what possible legitimate reason he has to oppose a speedy resolution of the appeal. And then they should rule with dispatch because there is still time , albeit barely, to vindicate the public’s right to a speedy trial.

Let’s recap how we arrived at the present moment. After Judge Tanya Chutkan ruled against Trump’s claim of presidential immunity on December 1 and Trump appealed that ruling to the D.C. Circuit, Smith asked the Supreme Court to hear the appeal immediately, leapfrogging the delay of the circuit-level argument and decision. Trump opposed that, and the Supreme Court declined Smith’s invitation. The circuit court expedited its appeal and on February 6 issued its decision , again rejecting Trump’s immunity argument in toto. Trump then sought a stay in the Supreme Court, and advocated various measures to slow the Court’s hearing of the case. The Supreme Court then deliberated for a couple of weeks before accepting the case for review, and not scheduling the argument until two months later—on the very last day of oral arguments for this session.

Were he not seeking to avoid any trial in advance of the general election so he could maximize the chances of becoming the next president of the United States, Trump would have an interest in a speedy resolution of the immunity question, in contrast to the foot-dragging positions he has advocated throughout the litigation of this issue. Anyone with a legitimate claim of immunity has every interest in not suffering a single day more under the opprobrium of multiple criminal charges, not to mention being under pretrial bail conditions and a gag order. (Trump’s lawyers have argued against his existing gag order, saying it sweeps so broadly as to undermine their client’s ability to campaign for the presidency.)

The law itself recognizes the need for speed on this issue. With questions of immunity, courts permit an appeal in advance of a trial and forgo the usual rule that appeals are permitted only after a verdict is reached. The hope, in allowing for this, is to relieve someone from the opprobrium and burden of a trial, if the defendant is indeed immune. For the Court to set such a prolonged schedule—antithetical to the appropriate time frame for the only issue actually before the justices—speaks volumes about the role the Court has chosen to play in advancing the interests of the former president over the rule of law.

The government has its own interests in seeking a prompt resolution of the immunity issue and a speedy criminal trial (and it has the same interest as a defendant in not subjecting someone to criminal charges who is immune from prosecution). But before delving into the government’s interests, let’s first dispense with a red herring : Special Counsel Smith is not disputing that Trump should be accorded sufficient time to prepare for trial. An inviolable constitutional safeguard is that all criminal defendants must be able to exercise their procedural rights to prepare. Judge Chutkan already weighed the parties’ competing claims. Her decision on a trial date fell well within the mark for similar cases, and that ruling is not on appeal (despite the Supreme Court’s behaving as if it were).

The district judge’s selected timeline (seven months from the August 1 indictment), in a case whose facts and substantial evidence were already available to the defendant, was longer than deadlines set all around the country. By way of comparison, next door in the more conservative Virginia district, defendants routinely go to trial at great speed, without conservative commentators going to the barricades over alleged violations of the rights of the accused. That Trump is a rich, white, and politically powerful man does not mean he should be accorded more (or fewer) rights than others. And Chutkan has said that when the case returns to her, she will give Trump more time to prepare.

David A. Graham: Judge Chutkan’s impossible choice

With Trump’s rights intact, then, Smith has several legitimate grounds for the immunity appeal to be decided expeditiously and a trial to start as promptly as possible. DOJ internal policy prohibits taking action in a case for “the purpose of” choosing sides in or affecting the outcome of an election. That is unquestionable and not in dispute here. Rather, the point is that well-established neutral criminal-justice principles support a speedy trial. This trial’s outcome, of course, is not known in advance, and it may lead some voters to think better or worse of the defendant and the current presidential administration depending on the evidence and the outcome.

Moreover, the public has a profound interest in a fair and speedy trial. As Justice Samuel Alito wrote for a unanimous Supreme Court, the Speedy Trial Act “was designed not just to benefit defendants but also to serve the public interest.” The refrain that “justice too long delayed is justice denied” has unmistakable resonance in this criminal context. The special counsel’s briefs in the D.C. case are replete with references to this well-settled case law . This means that even when the accused is seeking to delay his day in court, that “does not alter the prosecutor’s obligation to see to it that the case is brought on for trial,” as the Supreme Court has well articulated . Many defendants seek to avoid the day of reckoning—hence Edward Bennett Williams’s famous quip that for the defense, an adjournment is equivalent to an acquittal. The law provides that the public, the prosecution, and most emphatically the courts need not oblige that stratagem.

What’s more, when a defendant seeks to postpone a trial until a point at which he can no longer be prosecuted, the Justice Department may request the trial be held before that deadline. The DOJ’s interest in deterrence and accountability warrants this action. If Trump should win the election, he will become immune as president from criminal trial for at least four years (and perhaps forever by seeking dismissal of the federal case with prejudice or testing the efficacy of granting himself a pardon). The Justice Department can accordingly uphold the public interest in deterrence and accountability by seeking the prompt conviction of the leader of an insurrection. This DOJ need not advance the goals of a future administration led by that very “ oathbreaking insurrectionist .”

Another objective of criminal punishment is “specific deterrence,” ensuring the defendant herself does not commit offenses in the future. Given the grand jury’s determination that Trump committed felonies to try to interfere with the 2020 election, there are strong law-enforcement reasons to obtain a conviction to specifically deter Trump. Indeed, in proposing a trial date to Judge Chutkan, Smith quoted Justice Alito, on behalf of the whole Court, that speedy trials “serve the public interest by … preventing extended pretrial delay from impairing the deterrent effect of punishment.”

Trump’s public denigration of the legal system—the incessant claims that the criminal case is a witch hunt—also gives a nation committed to the rule of law a vital interest in holding a public trial where a jury can assess Trump’s actions. Trials can thus serve to restore faith in the justice system.

It is worth noting that when the government seeks its day in court, it simultaneously affords the defendant his day in court—providing him more process, not less. Indeed, the Department of Justice’s so-called 60-day rule—which generally forbids it from taking overt actions in non-public cases with respect to political candidates and closely related people right before an election—is there to avoid a federal prosecutor hurling untested new allegations against a political candidate precisely because he would not have time to clear his reputation before the election. Here, the government is seeking to provide just that forum for Trump to clear his name before the election—to test the criminal allegations against the highest legal standard we have for adjudicating facts—and yet right-wing critics attack Smith. Trump of course wants to avoid that test, but that is an interest the courts should abjure.

The justices still have time to get back on track. Trump’s claim that presidents have absolute immunity should be an easy issue to resolve given these criminal charges. Whether a president should have criminal immunity in some specific circumstances is an abstract question for another day, because efforts to stay in office and use the levers of the presidency are certainly not those specific circumstances. The appeals have delayed matters long enough at the expense of the right of the American people to a fair and speedy trial. Let them not stand in the way of ever having a trial at all.

Advertisement

Supported by

Poor Nations Are Writing a New Handbook for Getting Rich

Economies focused on exports have lifted millions out of poverty, but epochal changes in trade, supply chains and technology are making it a lot harder.

  • Share full article

A group of men sitting together at a market stall.

By Patricia Cohen

Reporting from London

For more than half a century, the handbook for how developing countries can grow rich hasn’t changed much: Move subsistence farmers into manufacturing jobs, and then sell what they produce to the rest of the world.

The recipe — customized in varying ways by Hong Kong, Singapore, South Korea, Taiwan and China — has produced the most potent engine the world has ever known for generating economic growth. It has helped lift hundreds of millions of people out of poverty, create jobs and raise standards of living.

The Asian Tigers and China succeeded by combining vast pools of cheap labor with access to international know-how and financing, and buyers that reached from Kalamazoo to Kuala Lumpur. Governments provided the scaffolding: They built up roads and schools, offered business-friendly rules and incentives, developed capable administrative institutions and nurtured incipient industries.

But technology is advancing, supply chains are shifting, and political tensions are reshaping trade patterns. And with that, doubts are growing about whether industrialization can still deliver the miracle growth it once did. For developing countries, which contain 85 percent of the globe’s population — 6.8 billion people — the implications are profound.

Today, manufacturing accounts for a smaller share of the world’s output, and China already does more than a third of it . At the same time, more emerging countries are selling inexpensive goods abroad, increasing competition. There are not as many gains to be squeezed out: Not everyone can be a net exporter or offer the world’s lowest wages and overhead.

There are doubts that industrialization can create the game-changing benefits it did in the past. Factories today tend to rely more on automated technology and less on cheapworkers who have little training.

“You cannot generate enough jobs for the vast majority of workers who are not very educated,” said Dani Rodrik, a leading development economist at Harvard.

The process can be seen in Bangladesh, which the World Bank’s managing director called “one of the world’s greatest development stories” last year. The country built its success on turning farmers into textile workers.

Last year, though, Rubana Huq, chair of Mohammadi Group, a family-owned conglomerate, replaced 3,000 employees with automated jacquard machines to do complex weaving patterns.

The women found similar jobs elsewhere in the company. “But what follows when this happens on a large scale?” asked Ms. Huq, who is also president of the Bangladesh Garment Manufacturers and Exporters Association.

These workers don’t have training, she said. “They’re not going to turn into coders overnight.”

Recent global developments have accelerated the transition.

Supply chain meltdowns related to the Covid-19 pandemic and to sanctions prompted by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine drove up the price of essentials like food and fuel, biting into incomes. High interest rates, imposed by central banks to quell inflation, set off another series of crises: Developing nations’ debts ballooned , and investment capital dried up.

Last week, the International Monetary Fund warned of the noxious combination of lower growth and higher debt.

The supercharged globalization that had encouraged companies to buy and sell in every spot around the planet has also been shifting. Rising political tensions, especially between China and the United States, are affecting where businesses and governments invest and trade.

Companies want supply chains to be secure as well as cheap, and they are looking at neighbors or political allies to provide them.

In this new era, Mr. Rodrik said, “the industrialization model — which practically every country that has become rich has relied on — is no longer capable of generating rapid and sustained economic growth.”

Nor is it clear what might replace it.

There’s a future in service jobs.

One alternative might be found in Bengaluru, a high-tech center in the Indian state of Karnataka.

Multinationals like Goldman Sachs, Victoria’s Secret and the Economist magazine have flocked to the city and set up hundreds of operational hubs — known as global capability centers — to handle accounting, design products, develop cybersecurity systems and artificial intelligence, and more.

Such centers are expected to generate 500,000 jobs nationwide in the next two to three years, according to the consulting firm Deloitte .

They are joining hundreds of biotech, engineering and information technology companies including homegrown giants like Tata Consultancy Services, Wipro and Infosys Limited. Four months ago, the American chip company AMD unveiled its largest global design center there.

“We have to move away from the idea of classic development stages, that you go from the farm to the factory and then from the factory to offices,” said Richard Baldwin , an economist at the IMD in Lausanne. “That whole development model is wrong.”

Two-thirds of the world’s output now comes from the service sector — a mishmash that includes dog walkers, manicurists, food preparers, cleaners and drivers, as well as highly trained chip designers, graphic artists, nurses, engineers and accountants.

It is possible to leapfrog to the service sector and grow by selling to businesses around the world, Mr. Baldwin argued. That is what helped India become the world’s fifth-largest economy .

In Bengaluru, formerly known as Bangalore, a general rise in middle-class living attracted more people and more businesses that, in turn, attracted more people and businesses, continuing the cycle, Mr. Baldwin explained.

Covid sped this transition, by forcing people to work remotely — from a different part of town, a different city or a different country.

In the new model, countries can focus growth around cities rather than a particular industry. “That creates economic activities which are fairly diverse,” Mr. Baldwin said.

“Think Bangalore, not South China,” he said.

Free markets are not enough.

Many developing nations remain focused on building export-oriented industries as the path to prosperity. And that’s how it should be, said Justin Yifu Lin , dean of the Institute of New Structural Economics at Peking University.

Pessimism about the classic development formula, he said, has been fueled by a misguided belief that the growth process was automatic: Just clear the way for the free market and the rest will take care of itself.

Countries were often pressured by the United States and the international institutions to embrace open markets and hands-off governance.

Export-led growth in Africa and Latin America stumbled because governments failed to protect and subsidize infant industries, said Mr. Lin, a former chief economist at the World Bank.

“Industrial policy was taboo for a long time,” he said, and many of those who tried failed. But there were also success stories like China and South Korea.

“You need the state to help the private sector overcome market failures,” he said. “You cannot do it without industrial policy. ”

It won’t work without education.

The overriding question is whether anything — services or manufacturing — can generate the type of growth that is desperately needed: broad based, large scale and sustainable.

Service jobs for businesses are multiplying, but many offering middle and high incomes are in areas like finance and tech, which tend to require advanced skills and education levels far above what most people in developing nations have.

In India, nearly half of college graduates don’t have the skills they need for these jobs, according to Wheebox , an educational testing service.

The mismatch is everywhere. The Future of Jobs report , published last year by the World Economic Forum, found that six in 10 workers will need retraining in the next three years, but the overwhelming majority won’t have access to it.

Other kinds of service jobs are proliferating, too, but many are neither well paid nor exportable. A barber in Bengaluru can’t cut your hair if you’re in Brooklyn.

That could mean smaller — and more uneven — growth.

Researchers at Yale University found that in India and several countries in sub-Saharan Africa, agricultural workers jumped into consumer service jobs and raised their productivity and incomes.

But there was a catch: The gains were “strikingly unequal” and disproportionately benefited the rich .

With a weakening global economy , developing countries will need to wring every bit of growth they can from every corner of their economies. Industrial policy is essential, Mr. Rodrik of Harvard said, but it should focus on smaller service firms and households because that is going to be the source of most future growth.

He and others caution that even so, gains are likely to be modest and hard won.

“The envelope has shrunk,” he said. “How much growth we can get is definitely less than in the past.”

An earlier version of this article misidentified the location of IMD. It is in Lausanne, not Geneva.

How we handle corrections

Patricia Cohen writes about global economics and is based in London. More about Patricia Cohen

playstation.com

  • PlayStation 5
  • PlayStation VR2
  • PlayStation 4
  • PlayStation Store
  • PlayStation Plus
  • Portuguese (Br)
  • Spanish (LatAm)
  • Spanish (EU)
  • Traditional Chinese

Stellar Blade demo arrives March 29

Stellar Blade demo arrives March 29

Get a taste of Shift Up’s sleek action adventure ahead of its April 26 PS5 release.

website for typing essays

Greetings. This is Hyung Tae Kim, director of Stellar Blade . We are pleased to officially announce the upcoming free playable demo for Stellar Blade, coming March 29 to PlayStation 5.

The demo takes place from the very beginning of the game when Eve, a member of the 7 th Airborne Squad is sent to Earth on a mission to reclaim the planet from the Naytiba, up to the first boss fight. This first stage will include the tutorial phase to help you familiarize yourself with basic combat features as you explore post-war Eidos 7, a human city now infested by the Naytiba, giving you an early grasp of gameplay mechanics that will serve you throughout the game’s story.

We also have a little surprise included for players who complete the first stage.

website for typing essays

From the smooth 60fps combat to the haptics, you’ll feel through the DualSense wireless controller, there are various charms of the game that you can only confidently appreciate through hands-on experience.

For those who complete the demo stage, you can carry over your save data when the full game releases on April 26, starting from the last checkpoint. Please note that save data must be stored on your PS5 system.

The Stellar Blade demo will be available starting Friday, March 29 from 7am PDT / 2pm GMT.

Alongside the demo, the full game will feature the following language options:

Voice Over: Korean, English, French, Italian, German, Spanish, Brazilian Portuguese, Latin Spanish.

Text: Korean, English (US), French, Italian, German, Spanish, Danish, Dutch, Finnish, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese, Russian, Swedish, Arabic, Turkish, Thai, Japanese, Simplified Chinese, Traditional Chinese.

We greatly appreciate your anticipation! Mark your calendar for April 26, and make sure not to miss the preorder bonuses. The time for humankind to reclaim Earth has nearly arrived.

Did you like this? Like this

Share this story

Join the Conversation

But don't be a jerk!

Please be kind, considerate, and constructive. Report inappropriate comments to [email protected]

27 Comments

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Trending Stories

Sand Land introduces the Hearts gang and the new Forest Land gameplay

Sand Land introduces the Hearts gang and the new Forest Land gameplay

website for typing essays

Heidi Kemps (she/her) PlayStation Blog Correspondent

Latest No Man’s Sky update adds ship customisation, new Guild system, space station overhaul, and more

Latest No Man’s Sky update adds ship customisation, new Guild system, space station overhaul, and more

website for typing essays

Sean Murray Founder, Hello Games

Gran Turismo 7 Update 1.44 brings 3 new cars, an extra Café Menu, 3 World Circuit Events, and more

Gran Turismo 7 Update 1.44 brings 3 new cars, an extra Café Menu, 3 World Circuit Events, and more

website for typing essays

Ken Chan Sr Product Manager, SIE

The Spring Sale comes to PlayStation Store

The Spring Sale comes to PlayStation Store

website for typing essays

Peter Boda Associate Digital Promotions Manager

PlayStation Plus Game Catalog lineup for February: Horizon Forbidden West, The Quarry, Resident Evil 7 biohazard and more

PlayStation Plus Game Catalog lineup for February: Horizon Forbidden West, The Quarry, Resident Evil 7 biohazard and more

website for typing essays

Adam Michel Director, Content Acquisition & Operations, Sony Interactive Entertainment

PlayStation Plus Game Catalog for June + PS5 Game Streaming news update for Premium members

PlayStation Plus Game Catalog for June + PS5 Game Streaming news update for Premium members

Nick Maguire VP, Global Services, Global Sales and Business Operations, SIE

New look for PS5 console this holiday season

New look for PS5 console this holiday season

Sid Shuman (he/him) Senior Director, Sony Interactive Entertainment Content Communications

Marvel’s Spider-Man 2 arrives only on PS5 October 20, Collector’s & Digital Deluxe Editions detailed

Marvel’s Spider-Man 2 arrives only on PS5 October 20, Collector’s & Digital Deluxe Editions detailed

website for typing essays

James Stevenson Community Director, Insomniac Games

 width=

Please enter your date of birth.

Sorry, you may not access this content..

IMAGES

  1. 5 Best Websites That Write Essays For You In USA

    website for typing essays

  2. A Website That Writes Essays For You Has To Be Reliable

    website for typing essays

  3. 17 Best Free Online Typing Test Sites You Should Try

    website for typing essays

  4. Websites That Write Essays for You: Top 10 Services

    website for typing essays

  5. EssayTyper: Website types your Essay for you!

    website for typing essays

  6. 10 Best Websites That Write Essays For You

    website for typing essays

VIDEO

  1. Why is he SO MAD💀

  2. Mastering the Art of Speed Typing for Efficient Exam Essays

  3. Best Typing Work From Mobile

  4. Website Typing Test Favorit Gua

  5. How to Launch Simple Typing Service Website

  6. Multiplayer Typing Test || Mr. Indian Typist || #typist #typing #fasttyping

COMMENTS

  1. English Typing Test Paragraphs

    Stimulate your mind as you test your typing speed with this standard English paragraph typing test. Watch your typing speed and accuracy increase as you learn about a variety of new topics! Over 40 typing test selections available. If you don't like a test prompt, you can get a different (random) prompt with the "change test" button - or select ...

  2. Typing Lessons

    Practice writing skills with paragraph typing exercises. This practice lesson consists of short paragraphs about interesting subjects. Find fun keyboard typing practice—and learn something new! Our paragraph practice is great typing practice for writing essays, reports, emails, and more for school and work. Continue.

  3. Typing Practice

    Take a typing test, practice typing lessons, learn to type faster.

  4. Practice typing by retyping ENTIRE novels

    Typing Practice | Test your typing while reading great books like Alice in Wonderland, 1984, Dracula, and The Art of War — or import your own material! TypeLit.io. Test your typing online by practicing on your favorite literature. Choose a book below to get started, or subscribe and import your own!

  5. Learn Touch Typing Free

    TypingClub is the best way to learn touch typing online for free. You can choose from 650 fun and engaging typing courses, games and videos in different languages and levels. Whether you are a student, a teacher or a professional, TypingClub can help you improve your typing skills and speed.

  6. Monkeytype

    Monkeytype is a minimalistic and customizable typing test. It featuresmany test modes, an account system to save your typing speed history, anduser-configurable features such as themes, sounds, a smooth caret, andmore. Monkeytype attempts to emulate the experience of natural keyboardtyping during a typing test, by unobtrusively presenting the ...

  7. Typing Lessons

    Learn to Type: Touch Typing Practice. Learn to touch type and improve your typing speed with free interactive typing lessons for all ages. Start your typing practice now!

  8. The Beginner's Guide to Writing an Essay

    The essay writing process consists of three main stages: Preparation: Decide on your topic, do your research, and create an essay outline. Writing: Set out your argument in the introduction, develop it with evidence in the main body, and wrap it up with a conclusion. Revision: Check your essay on the content, organization, grammar, spelling ...

  9. Blank Slate

    Here are the most important things when writing blank slates. First: Bookmark this page (+ d). Each time you need to write something down, click the bookmark and just start typing! Style your slates with markdown. Here's an exampleand the result when viewed. To save, press "+ s" at any time or click "save" in the bottom right.

  10. DeepL Write: AI-powered writing companion

    DeepL Write is a tool that helps you perfect your writing. Write clearly, precisely, with ease, and without errors. Try for free now! Perfect your writing in seconds Write clearly, precisely, and with ease. Source text. Type or paste text to see ideas for improvement.

  11. Yomu AI

    Yomu is an AI-powered writing assistant that helps you write better essays, papers, and academic writing. Simply start typing and Yomu will generate suggestions for you to use in your writing. You can also use Yomu to generate entire paragraphs or sections. Yomu also helps find citations, references, and sources for you to use in your writing.

  12. TypeFast.io

    Change the word list in the preferences menu in the upper right corner, or load your own text file. To see which words you got wrong, click on this row. At TypeFast.io you can test your typing speed in a minimalistic way, without skimping out on features such as multilanguage, sentence/word mode, and themes.

  13. TypingTest.com

    Compete against other talented typists around the globe and show where the best typists come from. Each country has its own league and you can advance higher in the rankings by completing races and collecting points. Start the Race! TypingTest.com offers a free online Typing Test and exciting typing games and keyboarding practice.

  14. Learn to Type

    Grade, track, and report on students' progress in real time. Unlimited students, unlimited classes, unlimited teachers, unlimited schools. Typing.com's teacher portal is FREE! World's most popular free typing program! Typing.com's K-12 typing curriculum features touch typing, digital citizenship, coding lessons, and games.

  15. Free online proofreading and essay editor

    Writing presumes more than simply laying out words on a paper. Typely helps you get in the mood and keeps you focused, immersed and ready to write your story. Whether you need a distraction-free environment, some chill relaxing sounds or a pomodoro timer to manage your time we got you covered.

  16. Scribbr

    Whether we're proofreading and editing, checking for plagiarism or AI content, generating citations, or writing useful Knowledge Base articles, our aim is to support students on their journey to become better academic writers. We believe that every student should have the right tools for academic success.

  17. Free AI Paragraph Generator

    Academic writing. Students and researchers can benefit from Ahrefs' Paragraph Generator when working on papers, essays, or research articles. By providing the necessary instructions, the tool can generate well-structured paragraphs that present key arguments, evidence, and analysis, aiding in the writing process. Personal writing and ...

  18. Paraphrasing Tool

    QuillBot's AI-powered paraphrasing tool will enhance your writing. Your words matter, and our paraphrasing tool is designed to ensure you use the right ones. With unlimited Custom modes and 8 predefined modes, Paraphraser lets you rephrase text countless ways. Our product will improve your fluency while also ensuring you have the appropriate ...

  19. Essaybot: Free Essay Writing Tool

    Essaybot is a 100% free professional essay writing service powered by AI. We offer essay formats for Argumentative Essay, Expository Essay, Narrative Essay, ITELS & TOEFL Essay and many more. Provide academic inspiration and paragraphs to help you in writing essays and finding citations. Finish your essay in 30 minutes!

  20. How to Resist the Temptation of AI When Writing

    Whether you're a student, a journalist, or a business professional, knowing how to do high-quality research and writing using trustworthy data and sources, without giving in to the temptation of ...

  21. Nine students win national handwriting contest

    Nine students won this year's national handwriting contest. A growing number of states are requiring cursive instruction, and research supports the benefits of writing on paper.

  22. Free Typing Test

    The first step to learn to type fast and increase your typing speed is to take a timed typing test! Our 1-minute, 3-minute, and 5-minute timed typing speed tests are free and can be used by children or adults to check average words per minute (WPM). The results of this WPM keyboard test will give you both your typing speed and your typing ...

  23. The Public Has a Right to Trump's Speedy Trial

    Donald Trump is determined to avoid accountability before the general election, and, so far, the U.S. Supreme Court is helping him. Trump has no legal ground whatsoever to delay a ruling in his ...

  24. Young Nebraskans Win Writing Competition

    Letters About Literature is a state-wide reading and writing promotion program. The competition encourages young people to read, be inspired, and write back to the author (living or dead) who had an impact on their lives. This annual contest is coordinated and sponsored by the Nebraska Center for the Book, Nebraska Library Commission, Lincoln ...

  25. Poor Nations Are Writing a New Handbook for Getting Rich

    Last year, though, Rubana Huq, chair of Mohammadi Group, a family-owned conglomerate, replaced 3,000 employees with automated jacquard machines to do complex weaving patterns.

  26. Stellar Blade demo arrives March 29

    We also have a little surprise included for players who complete the first stage. From the smooth 60fps combat to the haptics, you'll feel through the DualSense wireless controller, there are various charms of the game that you can only confidently appreciate through hands-on experience.