SwiftKey is one of many alternative keyboards available to Android phone and tablet users — and today it’s adding one of the features of its biggest competitors, Swype. SwiftKey’s claim to fame has ...
If you were to make a list of the biggest, most platform-defining differences between Apple’s iOS and Google’s Android, one point would be near the top: Android lets you plug third-party keyboards ...
Photo: Killian Bell/Cult of Mac You may already be familiar with the name — especially if you haven’t always been loyal to iOS — because SwiftKey is one of the most popular third-party keyboards on ...
SwiftKey is an alternate keyboard app for folks looking for something a little different from the keyboard that shipped with their phones. SwiftKey might not get as much attention as Swype, but that ...
At first glance, SwiftKey ($4, https://www.pcworld.com/appguide/app.html?id=624003&expand=false) looks much like the other keyboard app options in the market. But the ...
“Swype,” available for 99 cents on the Apple App Store, is a keyboard app that can speed up typing on touch-screen devices. Along with “SwiftKey,” it’s one of several third-party keyboard apps that ...
When iOS introduced support for third-party keyboards, SwiftKey – one of the most popular keyboards for Android – was quick to throw its hat into the battle for best input app. It’s been lagging a bit ...
One of the things I absolutely hate about using Google Android tablets right now is the keyboard. It was designed for 3 to 4 inch displays, not 7 to 10 inch screens, and when you stretch out the ...