- Touchpal X Premium Apk 2015
- Descargar Touchpal X Premium Apk
- Touch Pal X Premium Apk
- Touchpal X Premium Apk
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Sep 06, 2018 TouchPal Android keyboard 2018 is a new keyboard with fun emoji, auto-correct, predictive text and glide typing. Type fast single handedly. Download TouchPal Keyboard APK file v6.8.0.8 (com.cootek.smartinputv5.apk). Use boomtext to create your own GIF. Explore 1000+ emoji, 400+ free themes. Swipe to type faster.
- ProsUnique predictive word feature. Gesture typing. Smart learning-language model. Optional cloud sync. Tons of add-ons.
- ConsOptional premium subscription. More features than focus. 'Wave' typing interferes with some features. Deceptive emojis. Many add-ons are in-app purchases.
- Bottom LineTouchPal X matches the features of other Android keyboards and offers a unique interface that's actually quite easy to use, but it trips with a 'kitchen sink' approach and subscription fee.
The openness of Android has created whole avenues of development that would simply not be possible on other platforms. Take keyboards, for instance. Plucky developers have raised the bar, imagining new ways to enter text and introducing predictive language features that can guess your next word. Forget custom colors and shapes; this is the future of writing on smartphones. TouchPal X (free download, Google Play) packs a slew of high-end features for a bargain basement price, but then missteps with odd optional add-ons and a yearly subscription model starting at $2.99. But what it does for free it does pretty well.
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TouchPal Typing
If you're familiar with Editors' Choices Swype and SwiftKey, you already know the central features of TouchPal X. As with Swype, you can drag your thumb over letters to create whole words—it's so shockingly intuitive that Google made its own version called Google Keyboard, which is now stock on many Android devices. On TouchPal X, this drag-to-type feature is called 'Curve.'
If you're familiar with Editors' Choices Swype and SwiftKey, you already know the central features of TouchPal X. As with Swype, you can drag your thumb over letters to create whole words—it's so shockingly intuitive that Google made its own version called Google Keyboard, which is now stock on many Android devices. On TouchPal X, this drag-to-type feature is called 'Curve.'
Touchpal X Premium Apk 2015
Like SwiftKey, TouchPal X tries to guess your next word, to make tapping out a quick message even faster. The difference is that TouchPal peppers the keyboard with whole words instead of displaying the best option across the top. To select one, you have to tap and drag it to the spacebar. TouchPal calls this feature 'Wave.' I quite like this approach and feel it makes for a better typing experience—though it does look rather ugly and cluttered in action.
The TouchPal X keyboard also has secondary characters overlaying the primary ones. The whole top row, for instance, doubles as a 0-9 numpad, and the bottom row has useful shortcuts to symbols like '@' and '?'. Simply drag your finger up or down over these keys to type the secondary characters. I was impressed with how easy it was to use, but I ran into some trouble when trying to use it with Wave enabled. For example, when I went to drag the 'e' to a '3' it autocompleted to 'Tim.'
Learning Your Words
Learning from what you text has been part and parcel of the smartphone experience since the day the first smartphone user muttered, 'Damn you, autocorrect.' Early on, SwiftKey introduced the idea of augmenting personal language models with data scraped from other sources, such as users' Twitter accounts; TouchPal X also includes this feature.
Learning from what you text has been part and parcel of the smartphone experience since the day the first smartphone user muttered, 'Damn you, autocorrect.' Early on, SwiftKey introduced the idea of augmenting personal language models with data scraped from other sources, such as users' Twitter accounts; TouchPal X also includes this feature.
When I test Android keyboards, I always type the phrase, 'I am enjoying the hams of my ancestors,' and see how long it takes to have those words appear sequentially in the app's suggestions. I was very impressed with TouchPal, which only needed to see the sentence once before it parroted it back to me. Of course, depending on how complex the language model is, this could get a bit annoying if the app just absorbs rote phrases without taking context or frequency of use into account.
I also use a negative test with predictive keyboards, running nonsensical phrases through the keyboard to see what it predicts. In the past I've used the @horse_ebooks Twitter account, but have switched to the truly robotic @sort_of_faceafter the former broke my heart by being merely human. As I expected, TouchPal didn't predict a single word. However, there was one thrilling moment where after typing 'Archie Comics' and 'Betty,' I thought TouchPal suggested the quite contextually accurate 'Veronica,' but sadly I was mistaken. It had suggested 'Verruca.'
TouchPal X also scrapes the net for 'trending words,' which it displays in the settings as series of news articles. Presumably, these are the 'trending' sources. In action, this means that when I typed 'Betty,' it suggested I follow it with 'White.'
TouchPal X Keyboard (for Android)
Descargar Touchpal X Premium Apk
Bottom Line: TouchPal X matches the features of other Android keyboards and offers a unique interface that's actually quite easy to use, but it trips with a 'kitchen sink' approach and subscription fee.