It works on both hardware and software and is designed in two colors of black and blue, reported Business Insider. Made in India, it is available to the users at a reasonable price of just Rs 1,900. The keyboard functions by grouping letters according to phonetics which it makes it convenient to use. Guru Prasad, a Ph.D in industrial engineering, launched this keyboard in April which supports several languages based on the Brahmi Lipi. ‘ Ka-Naada’ is a unique patented keyboard layout design for Indic languages used in keyboards for language education using computer aided teaching for India, Nepal. While many of us still struggle to memorise which alphabets represent which ‘akshar’ in Hindi, a new computerised keyboard have put our nightmares to rest. Krutidev and Drishti font styles remain our closest friends. Majority of us have struggled with our Hindi assignments during our school days. If any regional language writer has not been able to write good computerised scripts, most probably the reason behind is unavailability of a font style.
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