Beginning in May, Microsoft is removing third-party login options from its popular SwiftKey smartphone keyboard app.
Microsoft is shutting down legacy SwiftKey logins this May, moving all learned typing data to OneDrive.
Starting May 31st, 2026, the Microsoft-owned SwiftKey will stop supporting Google and Apple accounts, according to Windows Central. Though you don’t need an account to use SwiftKey on its own, you’ll ...
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is a news writer who covers the streaming wars, consumer tech, crypto, social media, and much more. Previously, she was a writer and editor at MUO. Microsoft SwiftKey is getting a handy new feature ...
I was texting my wife the other day when it struck me that Swiftkey's next-word predictions seemed to be a little better than they had been in the past. At first I thought I was imagining things, but ...
A great balance between functionality and privacy.
Six short months ago, it seemed like Microsoft’s SwiftKey keyboard for iPhones and iPads was dead. It seemed that way because Microsoft had said it was dead and went so far as to delist it from the ...
Today we’re getting a first look at the next project to come from the Greenhouse, and it’s pretty awesome. SwiftKey’s new Neural keyboard is quite similar to the standard SwiftKey keyboard, but with a ...
Microsoft is boosting to its efforts in artificial intelligence by acquiring SwiftKey, a British startup that makes a popular predictive typing app as well as the language software that powers the ...
Microsoft has made a habit out of acquiring significant mobile app makers, but its next deal may cut particularly close to the bone for smartphone fans. The Financial Times' sources understand that ...