| ▲ | lynndotpy 2 days ago | |||||||
Further, iPhones are so bad if you exist anywhere outside the mainstream and language orthodoxy. Their voice recognition stubbornly refuses to acknowledge Linux, instead transcribing Linux. Typing "tboy" or "transfem", common terms in the trans community, gets changed to "toby" or "transfer". I can understand "toby", but the latter is especially bad, as the "r" and "m" keys are nowhere near each other. I'll type these words several times a day, every day, and it'll never get recorded. But one typo of the form "unbeleivalbe" gets permanently etched into the autocorrection. Any intentionally unorthodox english gets invisibly censored and editorialized. You can say "here come dat boi" nowadays (which is good if you're a fan of 2016 memes) but not "wrasslin". Phrases like "what you doin today" has its tone and informality stripped when it's changed to "what are you doing today". | ||||||||
| ▲ | leptons 2 days ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||
I would at some point throw my phone out the window if it worked like this. Instead I choose to have zero help correcting anything I type on my phone. I proofread, and fix any errors before I hit "send". I'm also on a folding android phone with a large screen and a 3rd-party keyboard app with adjustable size keys, so it's very easy to type. | ||||||||
| ▲ | m-s-y 2 days ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||
…and when I type standard, but clique-centric, abbreviations and slang among my own groups, the iPhone messes those up, too. Options also exist to pre-populate the predictive wordlists with our own terms, and to turn off predictive text altogether. | ||||||||
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