What is predictive text?
Predictive text is a technology that allows mobile phone users to use one key to represent multiple characters when typing a message. The system is considering the key sequence and offers the most likely candidate for the word the user intended. If the word is not correct, the software can offer options and the user chooses the one he wants. Over time, this technology learns with a user and can increase speed and accuracy when sending text messages.
Many mobile phones have developed predictive text technology. With the rise of smartphones with full, although small, keyboards, users had less likely to need this feature, but some phones continue to use this software. One of the pioneers in this area was the developer Martin King, who created a predictive text system T9. Some phones also have more dictionaries for bilingual users. Thus, the ULD switch between Spanish and English. When the user first begins to use predictive text, the program creates its suggestions for what is known about the average use of words in the language. As the program learns, it gives the weight that the user chooses more often.
In addition to allowing users to write words more precisely, predictive text can also propose words before the user's completion. As the writer works, he scans the characters sequence and predicts the most likely word he plans to use. Can flash the word on the selection screen for a selection or rejection unless it was the word he wanted. This can further increase speed, especially when the program learns more about the selection of user words and birds.
One inevitable consequence of predictive text was the rise of errors made by choosing a word or paying attention to The Word program selected automatically. Such errors may conceal the meaning of the sentence and occasionally the wayIT serious misunderstanding. In programs that also automatically correct or use the characters sequence to generate the nearest word, sometimes users end up with unexpected insertion into a text message. Software AutoCorrect is also present on many smartphones and draws on some of the same technology as predictive text.