
Photo: Taobao

Photo: Taobao
Requiring children to copy text – like textbook passages, poems and vocabulary – by hand, hundreds of times is reportedly common practice in Chinese schools. The South China Morning Post (SCMP) did a bit of research on these intriguing “handwriting robots” and found numerous offers on Chinese online platform Taobao, with prices ranging from 200 yuan ($30) to over 1,000 yuan ($147). More advanced versions reportedly allow users to input their own handwriting style by using an app to write 6,000 Chinese characters once each to enable the robot to learn them. According to the testimony of one such copying robot user, the devices can reproduce users’ handwriting so well that it’s very hard to tell it wasn’t written by them. The woman, who claimed to be a teacher, posted on Chinese messaging app QQ that she had spent a week imputing the 6,000 required characters via the mobile app, to create her own font, adding that no one could tell the difference between what the robot wrote and her own handwriting.
Photo: Taobao
SCMP found an online chat group about handwriting robots created by specialist robot shop LiteTech, with around 800 members, most of whom had joined after reading the viral news about the girl in Harbin. Local newspaper Harbin Daily also interviewed a shopkeeper selling copying robots and found that most of his customers were students. Handwriting robots typically consist of a metal frame that holds the sheets of paper in place and a mobile arm to which a pen or fountain pen can be attached. It is connected to a computer via USB cable and comes with a software which tells it what text it needs to write. Such robots can reportedly write at speeds of around 40 words per minute.via OMG Taiwan