Mobile keyboard firm SwiftKey showed NDTV Gadgets an early glimpse of
its transliteration keyboard with prediction. SwiftKey has already
launched predictive keyboards in English and most Indian languages, but
the company did not offer transliteration before.
If you're not
comfortable with typing in Hindi, then typing on a Hindi keyboard can be
challenging, as you try and locate the vowels and consonants on
non-standardised layouts.
Google's Hindi Input keyboard for
Android solves this for many people, as it allows you to type
phonetically using the English letters - jo dekhna chahte ho, aise
likho, and you'll see the Hindi words appear on screen.
Google's
keyboard works really well to let you type quickly, and the auto-correct
bar above the keyboard lets you quickly find the exact word you were
looking for, but the keyboard is limited in a number of ways. For one
thing, it lacks many modern features that we have come to take for
granted on English keyboards, such as next word prediction and swipe to
type.
(Also see: Indian Users the Most Engaged but Least Likely to Pay: SwiftKey)
Secondly, the keyboard lets you type in either Hindi or
English - if you're typing on the English keyboard, then you can tap on
the autocorrect bar to choose the English script text you entered, but
then you lose out even auto-correct. In Hinglish mode, you're typing in
the English script, but Hindi words are recognised; you can't easily
switch to the Devanagri script in this mode.
SwiftKey's keyboard
addresses these problems effectively. The company is still developing
the keyboard and adding support for more Indian languages, but it has
already built support for four Indian languages, and gave us a
demonstration of the keyboard being used with Hindi.
Typing in namaste works exactly like the Google Hindi Input tool - you type in the Roman script, and see नमस्ते rendered. What stood out is the fact that the word suggestions included
the word in both scripts, and there were also next word predictions.
You could type one word and then tap out the next few common words - the
suggestions came in both the Roman and Devanagri script. This allows
you to quickly move from typing in English to Hinglish to Hindi, and
what's really interesting is that the keyboard remembers your typing
choices. So you could easily type something like Mera India महान without breaking a sweat.
Predictive
keyboards typically offer word suggestions based on what they've
learned about your usage. The SwiftKey prototype we saw goes a step
further, and picks the script to offer suggestions in based on your past
usage too - so if you prefer to type a particular word in Hinglish and
another in Hindi, the predictions will be tailored accordingly. And,
according to SwiftKey, this new keyboard will not just support Hindi
transliteration, but most major Indian languages.
According to the
company, this update will only arrive later in 2015, but the prototype
we saw in action is already quite impressive. SwiftKey's forthcoming
keyboards should definitely lead to more typing in India languages. The transliteration keyboards won't be a gamechanger if you're more comfortable typing in Indian languages than in English. However, if you need to enter text in Indian languages but aren't used to typing on an Indic keyboard, this could be a huge step up.