TC50: Get ready for a revolution in mobile phones – Swype turns a stylus into a keyboard

Usage of SMS and chat on mobile phones is growing by leaps and bounds, but there’s nothing quite as painful as trying to type out a long message on a keypad or touch interface. Swype is the one company I’ve seen that might be able to change that.

The basic idea of Swype is using a touchpad to quickly link together letters on a displayed keyboard. So if you want to spell “VentureBeat”, for example, you just trace your style tip back from V to e, to n, to t, and so forth. The technology also works using your fingertip.

Swype’s magic lies in how smoothly it works. The software has its own dictionary, so it auto-corrects for mistakes and variations in style. The tracing technique looks smooth and graceful, like a return to cursive-style writing. It looks like something that should have always existed.

But the most important detail is the speed. Swype’s founder said onstage that new users can reach 40 words per minute within a couple of days, and before long hit 50wpm. That’s as fast as many people type. Any application that can make messaging that easy could make mobile messaging tolerable.

As it stands, Swype doesn’t look like it has any real competitors (although ShapeWriter, for the iPhone, did come up). But there are other possibilities for fast text entry – one of last year’s presenters at TechCrunch40, Yap, does speech-to-text for mobile, which is ideal for some situations if it works. And there’s also handwriting recognition on touch screens, although researchers have spent years fighting that problem without finding a great solution.

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About the Author, Chris Morrison

Chris Morrison writes about cleantech and environmental issues for VentureBeat, with occasional forays into gaming and semantic technology. He got his start writing about tech for Business 2.0 magazine, but quickly realized new media was the ticket when that institution closed its doors in 2007. Chris has also covered public equities and regulatory issues. He originally hails from southern Virginia, graduated from Evergreen State College in Washington, and now lives in San Francisco.

  • Sceptic
    I dont get how this is faster ? i.e. typing on the iphone with two hands is 100% faster than this method would ever be. It doesn't beat speech and you cant really use it while driving.

    More so, I would be interested to see how people with "fat fingers" (ahem ... most of the USA) would go using this service and whether it would be able to dechiper what the person is "swiping" using fingers without a stylus ....

    My 2 cents ....

    Clearly I am missing something .... ?
  • I've seen iPhone addicts tapping away, and it doesn't look particularly fast. I've had various tablets, and thumb typing just ain't that speedy, or fun. I'm pretty sure Swype would be faster, not to mention taking a bit less concentration.

    It didn't look like Swype worked quite as well with fingers rather than stylus, but it still looked pretty fast. Re: fat fingers, you got me there. But having fat fingers isn't exactly a bonus using a regular phone's keypad or touchscreen, either.
  • v
    I am not sure whats revolutionary about this product. There are similar products already out there. Check out this company http://www.shapewriter.com/video.html they have an app for the iPhone which you can download from iTunes store already. It came from a IBM patent and has been around for atleast 3-4 years.
  • fghg
    What is the difference with SlideIT????
    See free demos at http://dasur.co.il/Download.php