Touch-based software keyboards on mobile phones are rapidly evolving. Meet Swype, a company that's trying to be on your next phone, TV, and game system. Josh Lowensohn joined CNET in 2006 and now ...
Nuance is giving up on the third-party keyboard business, discontinuing its Swype Keyboard app for iOS and Android. The XDA Developers blog confirmed the news after Nuance quietly began telling ...
I'm PCMag's managing editor for consumer electronics, overseeing an experienced team of analysts covering smart home, home entertainment, wearables, fitness and health tech, and various other product ...
In response to the question about the app crashing on the Google Pixel 2, the Swype Product Team issued the following statement: Nuance will no longer be updating the ...
After several years of helping smartphone users with typing seamlessly using one hand, Nuance confirmed that it is discontinuing Swype support immediately. For others, the future unavailability of the ...
Swype, the influential smartphone keyboard, is dead. XDA Developers is reporting that Swype’s owner, Nuance Communications, is discontinuing development of the popular keyboard app. While it might ...
Swype, the learning keyboard application is now available for Android devices. For the first time, the app can be downloaded from the Google Play store on smartphones and tablet devices enabling ...
One of the original third-party keyboard giants is dead. Swype keyboard has officially been discontinued. Swype was one of the first “swiping” keyboards on the market and for a time, was the go-to ...
Nuance’s Swype keyboard apps for iOS and Android have been discontinued, as the company focuses its efforts on the business market … The news was revealed when a Reddit user posted a message from ...
One of the things that made the original iPhone different than most smartphones that had come before was that it didn’t have a physical keyboard and didn’t need a stylus. Apple developed an on-screen ...
Nuance confirms the end of the app that popularized swiping Nuance confirms the end of the app that popularized swiping is The Verge’s executive editor. He has covered tech, policy, and online ...