

For those customers who have SwiftKey installed on iOS, it will continue to work until it is manually uninstalled or a user gets a new device. Microsoft will continue support for SwiftKey Android as well as the underlying technology that powers the Windows touch keyboard. "As of October 5, support for SwiftKey iOS will end and it will be delisted from the Apple App Store. Responding to a request from ZDNet's Mary Jo Foley for more information after a lack of updates to the app for over a year, director of product management at SwiftKey, Chris Wolfe, gave the following statement:

The SwiftKey developers seem to focus nowadays on a myriad of keyboard templates and colours with the updates, instead of keeping functionality.Microsoft is ending support for its SwiftKey predictive keyboard for iPhone and the app will be delisted from the App Store next week, the company confirmed on Wednesday. So sad that apps need to deteriorate with updates. I am now looking for a replacement app that will give me the functionality that I've come to live in this app.

The changes it to Suzan over and over and again. Now it gets changed to "I am" and I do not have the option force it to learn Ina. The old app learned this very quickly and even corrected me if it seemed that I misspelled Ina. And if a word is not 100% a dictionary word it will never ever accept it first time (always suggest something else), never store it or recognise it as one of your specific words.įor instance: My daughter's name is Ina. Now it seems to be a simple dictionary linked app. Over time it learned what words that it does not recognise in any dictionary, I tend to use and even which of them needed to be capitalised - gone.

Over time it built up a library of the words that I used most and had them ready to use as I type. And it became more and more a hindrance than a functionable tool. It was só useful and functioned really well. This was really one of my most favourite apps. Lost it's greatest functionality with latest updates
