From today, the popular keyboard app SwiftKey will be powered by a neural network. The latest version of the app combines the features of its Neural Alpha, released last October, and its regular app ...
All I have to do is use the same Microsoft account on my PC and SwiftKey, and it syncs copied text between devices. I can copy a paragraph, a link, or an email address on my PC, and it shows up on my ...
Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. SwiftKey’s disappearing from the Apple App Store on October 5th, but you’ll still be able to use it if you have ...
SwiftKey, the startup that makes the popular eponymous Android word-predicting keyboard software — which last year pulled in $17.5 million in funding from Index, Accel and Octopus — is switching its ...
If you buy something from a Verge link, Vox Media may earn a commission. See our ethics statement. Swiftkey announced a new keyboard app today, its first major app since it was acquired by Microsoft ...
The SwiftKey team has just unveiled a new feature for its Android application, a feature that makes sharing a lot easier. Once a new update arrives to your SwiftKey application, you will be able to ...
Typing on Apple's devices has become a lot easier with iOS 8, but Apple's QuickType keyboard is not the only reason why. A number of popular Android keyboard apps have made their way over to the Apple ...
SwiftKey introduced the Swiftmoji keyboard two years ago. Now, since most Swiftmoji features are in SwiftKey, the Swiftmoji app will be abandoned (i.e., no more updates). If you are still using ...
A new SwiftKey keyboard hopes to serve you better typing suggestions by utilizing a miniaturized neural network. SwiftKey Neural does away with the company's tried-and-tested prediction engine in ...
SwiftKey’s last major update dropped in August 2021. So, Microsoft killing the keyboard in October this year was not surprising. But the company probably underestimated how many iPhone users prefer ...
SwiftKey, the word-predicting artificially intelligent keyboard made by a U.K. startup — whose machine-learning software was on more than 100 million devices globally last year (most of them Androids) ...