Swiftkey
Swiftkey learns how you type to give you better predictions, if you give it permission it can also learn your typing style by reading your Twitter and Facebook posts, as well as read your Gmail account and blog.
Swiftkey
Swiftkey learns how you type to give you better predictions, if you give it permission it can also learn your typing style by reading your Twitter and Facebook posts, as well as read your Gmail account and blog.
Last
Apple has certainly set the standard in the tablet market, and there is still no credible Android competitor on the market yet (the new Samsungs coming soon at least pricewise might be able to compete a little). Arguably Apple also kicked off the Smartphone revolution when they introduced the iPhone a few years ago (though RIM might disagree with that).
There are many reasons I like Android over iOS, but on of the biggest is typing. Surprisingly while Apple is clearly a leader and innovator in the mobile/tablet space, they have not done anything to make typing easier, or faster on their devices. In fact a whole site exists to highlight typos on iPhones.
Here is a look at a few alternate keyboards that I have been using on Android, which make typing easier, and faster. No I am not saying I never make typos or errant autocorrects when using Android, if you follow me on Twitter you have probably seen some of them, but it is certainly easier and faster to type.
Swiftkey, similar to the stock Android keyboard predicts what word you want to type next, the difference is it learns from what you have already typed, so if you use a certain phrase repeatedly it learns from that and uses that to generate predictions for you. For those of you who have ever seen me tweet during a football game this means I type “Touchdown†and Swiftkey knows the next word is “#Giantsâ€.
Swype is different in that it allows you tp swipe your finger over keys with out taking your finger off the keyboard and does a pretry good job of guessing the word you meant. You can view some videos of Swype in action on their site. I find Swype very useful for shorter messages like texts and tweets, not as convenient for longer messages like an e-mail.
Google acquired this company last fall, which hints that they are looking to improve the stock Android keyboard, to date I have not seen them ship anything using BlindType, but there is a demo.
I received an Alpha invite to Siine yesterday, definitely a different approach to a virtual keyboard, and I like the idea, it provides a lot of shortcuts, and easy entry for common tasks. The only downside is it has a steep learning curve getting used to it, and the standard keyboard it bundles in is not a very good one at all. I would love to see a cross between Siine and Swiftkey.
There are other keyboards for Android, but you get the idea. So I wonder why there are no add on keyboards for iOS, well probably because Apple would reject them from the App Store. I find that I make a lot of mistakes on the iPad, and generally it takes more keystrokes on iOS than Android to accomplish the same things.
Am I missing anything? are there any innovations for typing on iOS that I am missing? If not I wonder if this is something that will be addressed in iOS 5.