Windows 10 is Adding SwiftKey, Laying the Groundwork For Dual-Screen Tablets (cnet.com) 41
Sean Hollister, writing for CNET: Microsoft-owned SwiftKey was one of the first virtual keyboards to offer intelligent, predictive swipe-typing on Android and iOS phones, and now Microsoft has announced that it will become the default keyboard for touchscreen-equipped Windows 10 computers as well. "SwiftKey will now power the typing experience on Windows when using the touch keyboard to write in English (United States), English (United Kingdom), French (France), German (Germany), Italian (Italy), Spanish (Spain), Portuguese (Brazil), or Russian," reads a portion of Microsoft's blog post. Which could be pretty handy if the rumors are true: Microsoft is reportedly planning to ship several new Surface tablets this year, including a new low-cost Surface slate and the dual-screen "Andromeda." Dual screens were a theme among laptop manufacturers at Computex last week, too.
Microsoft bought slashdot (Score:2)
You probably have been wondering about why every third post is some Microsoft trivia announce late adoption of some tired standard.
No Touch Feedback? (Score:2)
How are you supposed to touch type without any feedback from the keys?
You will be reduced to hunt and peck and very short documents.
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I think he meant homing nubs on the home row's keys. They are used to find the right hand position by touch alone.
Look closely at the F and J keys on a physical keyboard!
I think a bigger issue though is that you can't use muscle memory from physical keyboards on touch screens. Physical keyboards have a very specific layout with each key allocated a 3/4" by 3/4" square and rows being offset 1/2 and 1/4 key. Even Apple's keyboards adhere to that standard (except slightly smaller on the vertical).
Touch screen
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Swyping is almost as fast as a good touch typer. Just use that.
Do you work for the Handicapper General?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
USB ; Bluetooth ; etc. (Score:2)
so - when you're faced with a tablet and no physical keyboard, how do you type ?
By plugging in a physical keyboard.
Either actually physically plugging on the USB-OTG port, or connecting over bluetooth.
As a side note, the 4-part foldable (W-shaped) keyboard by Stowaway / ThinkOutside are great. Fit easily in a big pocket, once folded out has the size of a standard 88-key desktop. (As opposed to the current popular "cram everything in a tiny space, size the same as the screen tablet")
I still have my bluetooth one from back in the PalmOS-era, works great with my current smartphone (Sailfi
Adendum: keyboard (Score:2)
Do you just use your overwhelming sense of superiority to shame the text into appearing?
Cue in comment about IBM type M keyboard [pckeyboard.com] and prying it from someones' cold, dead hands.
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Indeed. Most current Microsoft tablets are neither functional tablets nor functional PCs but still crippled half-arsed compromises.
The devices need ports, to be able to receive power and forward power to a device that has a single USB lead.
I often use a 8" Lenovo Yoga Tab with Windows 10. The hardware is pretty good except for having only one port. I want a proper OS on it that allows me to do file management.
But Windows' user interface in "tablet mode" is half-assed, and would be completely unusable if the
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Indeed. Most current Microsoft tablets are neither functional tablets nor functional PCs but still crippled half-arsed compromises.
The devices need ports, to be able to receive power and forward power to a device that has a single USB lead.
Microsoft is just following Apple's lead on how to be courageous. Nobody needs a physical keyboard when a virtual one will do so ports are legacy items which will be deprecated.
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I wouldn't worry too much about it. Microsoft will find a way to make this un-buyable.
So you mean make physical keyboards unbuyable? Now that I can believe.
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How are you supposed to touch type without any feedback from the keys?
You will be reduced to hunt and peck and very short documents.
Touch typing is only supported on enterprise versions of Windows. Consumers are not licensed to produce content.
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That's only Microsoft's terminology... Used to make Windows tablets feel special and different from other tablets.
Input methods (Score:1)
Great! That gives me TWO screens that voice recognition programs won't recognise, not just one! That's twice the frustration!
I do wish that normal speakers of English didn't have to sound like Americans to speak to a computer.
Not likely (Score:2)
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You can fix your haiku by replacing "is" with a dash.
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