Tag: smartphone
swype: the new hotness (for touch-screen devices)
by Dana on Jun.30, 2010, under featured, tech
This is a guest post by Dana Harrison. Check up on his other activities at The Linux Experiment and his other posts on audiophonik.
Hi, all! You may have noticed already by reading my slightly different name, or perhaps you’ve heard of me over on the wildly popular site I co-founded, The Linux Experiment, but I am not the usual Phil. My name is Dana, and I’m a young professional working in IT for a large insurance company. I work with Phil and also had the pleasure of founding The Linux Experiment with him. This is my second guest post for audiophonik.
This time around, Phil has asked me to do another review for an application available on Google’s Android platform. This time, it surrounds my new (I use that phrase loosely) HTC Magic+ phone on Rogers, sporting Android 1.5 because HTC and Rogers are too damn lazy to have updated me yet to Android 2.1.
Swype: An Introduction
Swype is a multi-platform, and rather kick-ass, replacement to the usual hum-drum keyboards offered with today’s touch-screen smartphones and other devices. It offers gesture-based text entry for all of the usual applications included with these devices, like e-mail, messaging, and web-browsing. Here’s a nifty screenshot:
The idea behind Swype is simple: instead of individual key presses on a QWERTY or T9-based keypad, the user simply slides their finger around on the screen, covering the keys for each word they want to type. The sequence above could correspond to “or” or “our” – in this situation, both options would show up on a prompt. To better simulate “or”, you could slide your finger up and around the other buttons, stopping at “r”.
Sounds awesome – how about in practice?
While it takes a bit of getting used to, Swype works beautifully in real-world applications. It’s intuitive, quick, and incredibly accurate – more than once have I randomly scribbled my thumb over a few different keys, and nine times out of ten it gets the exact word I was thinking of. Getting used to single-thumbing a full QWERTY setup can be challenging, after only two days of full Swype use I’m sure that I’ve improved over my previous typing speed.
The only real ‘issue’ I’ve encountered is actually with my phone itself. I’ve found that having a second-generation Android device can… lag, at times. Word choice can take up to a few seconds to show up, depending on how badly I’ve butchered the key gestures. On the upside, I can continue typing along, hoping the whole time that the proper words are going to come up (before they all do at once). The screen on the HTC Magic can also get a little… moist at times, which will sometimes cause sliding motions to skip over the screen, missing letters. Maybe I’m just a sweaty bastard, I don’t know.
The Verdict
Swype is a fantastic, easy-to-use, and super-fast alternative to the standard keyboard of any touch-screen device. While the public beta is closed for now, I’m sure it’ll either be up again shortly or pop up on the Market for several mobile devices in no time. I suggest you get it as soon as you can.
Screen captures to follow – video, if I can manage it – as soon as I figure out how the hell to get it to work on Windows.
