Follow Slashdot blog updates by subscribing to our blog RSS feed

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Google IOS Android Businesses Communications Iphone Networking Software The Internet Apple Hardware News Technology

Google Launches 'Gboard' Keyboard For iOS, Featuring Built-In Google Search (techcrunch.com) 47

An anonymous reader writes: Google launched a new keyboard application called "Gboard" for iOS today that features Google Search built-in to the keyboard itself. In addition, it offers swipe-based typing and access to GIFs, as well as some basic features like emojis and word predictions. The "G" icon in the upper lefthand corner opens a window for you to search Google without leaving the keyboard and launching a browser or the Google app. From there you can search for things like flight times, news articles, restaurant and business listings, weather and more, and paste that information into your chat with a single tap. The information is presented in a card-style layout. "We wanted to bring the best of Google to Gboard, so you'll see Maps, Translate, image and video search, News and others," says Rajan Patel, head of the product team that developed Gboard. "Initially, Gboard will not surface any information specific to you," he added, hinting that a personalized keyboard is in the works for the future.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Google Launches 'Gboard' Keyboard For iOS, Featuring Built-In Google Search

Comments Filter:
  • Nice! (Score:4, Interesting)

    by 110010001000 ( 697113 ) on Thursday May 12, 2016 @07:34PM (#52101985) Homepage Journal
    Downloading it now! Now THAT is innovation. Apps!
  • Important question (Score:5, Interesting)

    by MobileTatsu-NJG ( 946591 ) on Thursday May 12, 2016 @07:51PM (#52102021)

    What prevents Google from sending everything you type back to the mother-ship?

    • by dgatwood ( 11270 )

      Apple's app review, for one....

    • Yep, I wondered how long until this slashvertisment for 'helpful' Google products would turn into a discussion about invasiveness.

      "I use an iPhone so I don't get infected by all that Google s--t."

      But yeah, I am finding the notifications on Android lately rather frightening. Maybe it's my paranoia kicking in but even if they don't use my data maliciously I find it scary that they remind me from scanning my email that a bill is due or that if I take this route I'm 26 minutes from 'home'.

      So I think a dose of A

      • by c ( 8461 )

        Have you considered just turning off all the Google Now functionality? Because that's where all those "helpful" notifications are coming from.

        • Cheers, I'll give it a try.

        • by Anonymous Coward

          Disabling that functionality does not mean the data is not still being sent to Google, it just means you don't get the benefit of the services in exchange for that data anymore. If data privacy is the concern, removal of Google software is the answer.

          • The data isn't being sent to Google because he's using Gmail. It's stupid giving a company your email messages and then getting freaked out that their computers actually have the data in your email.

      • I find it scary that they remind me from scanning my email that a bill is due or that if I take this route I'm 26 minutes from 'home'.

        Why is it more scary for the company that holds your email to scan it for relevant information that you might be interested in than for them to scan the information for the spam filtering and routing that every email provider needs to do?

        They have the information in your email and you know it, so why not use it for your benefit instead of pretending that they don't actually have the data that you've asked them to hold for you?

    • Nothing.

      Your passwords are safe provided you only type them into password fields (as the default iOS keyboard is the only keyboard you can use to type in password text boxes or whatever the technical name for them is).

      I use SwiftKey on iOS which was recently acquired by Microsoft so it was only a short amount of time before Google brought out their alternative.

      But I am well aware that anything I type can be and is probably used by the developers (Apple make a point of announcing this when installing
    • by Anonymous Coward

      The same thing that prevents all other keyboard apps from doing .

    • Any add-on keyboard app can do that. A keyboard app is literally half of a keylogger. There is simply no way around it - it has to know what you're typing in order to function as a keyboard. Whenever you install a keyboard app on Android, it pops up a warning saying it can't guarantee the privacy of anything you type.

      And FWIW, anything you type into Apple's messaging app is sent to the Apple mothership. The iPhones exchange text messages across Apple's iMessage servers instead of via SMS (which only
      • When you send a text to a non-iPhone, it goes through an iMessage-SMS gateway.

        Citation ? I thought when Messages determines the recipient is not an iPhone, it uses the SMS functionality of the carrier - not any iMessage-SMS gateway.

    • What prevents Google from sending everything you type back to the mother-ship?

      Why would you say such a cruel and hateful thing about an advertising agency?

  • by Anonymous Coward

    In iOS, 3rd party keyboards must be provided Full Access to the device. This includes Contacts, Calendars, Photos, Location, and almost everything you type. Oh, and Internet access with which to upload all this information to Google (or whomever).

    • by Desler ( 1608317 )

      Nope only the shitty ones require that. I've used Swype and have never granted it full access.

  • I'm so happy to have this. I finally can use the glide typing. I have a free iphone from work and am too cheap to have a second phone, and I was envious of my android friends better keyboards.
    • SwiftKey (as well as many alternatives) have offered "glide typing" for a while now.
      • Whatevs. Been burnt too many times by third party apps that require in app purchases or have ads or whatnot. Say what you want about gooble, at least they don't want my money and won't show me flashing banner ads.
        • 5 minutes of research will show you that SwiftKey is free with no ads. The only in-app purchase is for different themes if you want them.
    • by Desler ( 1608317 )

      Third-party keyboards on iOS have been around for months and months now. slowpoke.jpg much?

  • Google it, and 'Let me Google that for you' are already embedded in common parlance. So I can now Google something 'more easily', immediately get the results that Google wants me to have and then buy shit, probably from Amazon. Is the world wonderful or am I just old, grumpy and slightly fearful?
    • Yeah but remember when "Yahoo" used to be the common parlance? Google won't be around forever.
      • by hughbar ( 579555 )
        I hope, and also, IBM had huge dominance in the mainframe era. My main worry is that things are getting sewn together in Googlezon + Facebay etc.
  • This is the stupidest thing ever, I don't need search built-in to a keyboard! The keyboard ONLY appears when I am trying to type something in to a field, the last damn thing I need is to hit a button and be taken away from what I am trying to do! What someone NEEDS to do is make a keyboard for iOS with a number row visible at the top at all times the keyboard is up.

Keep up the good work! But please don't ask me to help.

Working...