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Typewise have three products: a smartphone keyboard app, an AI writing assistant, and an API. Typewise writing assistant is a browser-based predictive text tool designed to increase the speed and quality of written communication, specifically for customer support and sales teams. The company claims it can increase productivity by 2-3 times. [11]
Adaptxt is a predictive text application for mobile phones, developed by KeyPoint Technologies, a UK-based software company. The application is designed to improve text entry on mobile devices by making it faster and error-free.
They developed a predictive text technology called SureType with a QWERTY-like layout, using two keys per button. By using only two letters per button, rather than three letters per button as in T9 using ten-digit keypads, predictive text accuracy could be improved dramatically. The use of a QWERTY-like layout took advantage of people's memory ...
Lightkey’s artificial intelligence-powered text prediction software learns your typing patterns and gradually predicts up to a dozen words, including punctuation marks, allowing you to compose ...
The dictionary is expandable. After introducing a new word, the next time the user tries to produce that word, T9 adds it to the predictive dictionary. The user database (UDB) can be expanded via multi-tap. The implementation of the user database is dependent on the version of T9 and how T9 is actually integrated on the device.
XT9 is a text predicting and correcting system for mobile devices with full keyboards rather than the 3x4 keypad on old phones. [1] It was originally developed by Tegic Communications, now part of Nuance Communications. [2] It was originally created for devices with styluses, but is now commonly used for touch screen devices.
BlackBerry implemented some of the features of BlackBerry 10 within Android, such as BlackBerry Hub, BlackBerry Virtual Keyboard, BlackBerry Calendar, and BlackBerry Contacts. [ 142 ] On July 26, 2016, a mid-range model with only an on-screen keyboard was introduced, the slim BlackBerry DTEK50 , powered by the then-latest version of Android (6. ...
WordWise was not a dictionary-based predictive system, but rather an extension of the LetterWise system to predict whole words from their linguistic components. It was designed to compete with dictionary-based predictive systems such as T9 and iTap which were commonly used with mobile phones with 12-key telephone keypads.