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FARVEL BIG TECH
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  2. Ikke-kategoriseret
  3. TapType is out.

TapType is out.

Planlagt Fastgjort Låst Flyttet Ikke-kategoriseret
taptypeaccessibilitya11yandroidblind
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  • F fireborn@dragonscave.space

    @4censord I fixed it in 1.0.2 🙂

    4censord@unfug.social4 This user is from outside of this forum
    4censord@unfug.social4 This user is from outside of this forum
    4censord@unfug.social
    wrote sidst redigeret af
    #85

    @fireborn nice, works perfectly!

    F 1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • 4censord@unfug.social4 4censord@unfug.social

      @fireborn nice, works perfectly!

      F This user is from outside of this forum
      F This user is from outside of this forum
      fireborn@dragonscave.space
      wrote sidst redigeret af
      #86

      @4censord I found it while trying to do this exact thing haha.

      4censord@unfug.social4 1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • F fireborn@dragonscave.space

        TapType is out. It's a keyboard for blind Android users.
        There are no visible keys. You tap where QWERTY keys would be from muscle memory, and a spatial prediction algorithm figures out what you meant. It scores nearby keys using a Gaussian proximity model and runs a beam search against an 80,000 word dictionary. You don't need to be precise. That's the whole point.
        Swipe right to commit a word. Swipe down or up to cycle through suggestions. Swipe left to delete. It learns what words you use most and ranks them higher over time, and you can add your own words to a personal dictionary.
        Every letter has its own unique sound, from Andre Louis's keyboard sound recordings, so you can learn to identify keys by ear without relying on speech. Each swipe direction has a distinct sound too. TTS is there when you want it, adjustable speed, and you can turn it off entirely if you prefer sounds only.
        It has emoji search with skin tone selection and favourites, a number pad mode, an upper case mode, and full punctuation support with a customizable quick list. Two-finger gestures handle things like send, close keyboard, switch keyboard, and voice input.
        Everything works with TalkBack. I built this because FlickType was a fantastic keyboard for blind iOS users and then it was gone. Nothing like it existed on Android, so I made one.
        It's free, no ads, no tracking, no metrics. I'm not evil.

        Edit: Now on 2.0 with multiple languages supported.

        If you find TapType useful, consider supporting its development:
        https://paypal.me/aaronhewitt
        https://github.com/sponsors/aaron-gh
        https://liberapay.com/fireborn/

        Download: https://github.com/aaron-gh/taptype-releases/releases/latest
        #TapType #Accessibility #A11y #Android #Blind #VisuallyImpaired #TalkBack #Keyboard #AssistiveTech

        enidkapelsen@social.cologneE This user is from outside of this forum
        enidkapelsen@social.cologneE This user is from outside of this forum
        enidkapelsen@social.cologne
        wrote sidst redigeret af
        #87

        @marcozehe guck mal, das erinnert mich doch an ein kleines UI-Projekt, das wir mal zusammen machen durften 🙂

        1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • F fireborn@dragonscave.space

          TapType is out. It's a keyboard for blind Android users.
          There are no visible keys. You tap where QWERTY keys would be from muscle memory, and a spatial prediction algorithm figures out what you meant. It scores nearby keys using a Gaussian proximity model and runs a beam search against an 80,000 word dictionary. You don't need to be precise. That's the whole point.
          Swipe right to commit a word. Swipe down or up to cycle through suggestions. Swipe left to delete. It learns what words you use most and ranks them higher over time, and you can add your own words to a personal dictionary.
          Every letter has its own unique sound, from Andre Louis's keyboard sound recordings, so you can learn to identify keys by ear without relying on speech. Each swipe direction has a distinct sound too. TTS is there when you want it, adjustable speed, and you can turn it off entirely if you prefer sounds only.
          It has emoji search with skin tone selection and favourites, a number pad mode, an upper case mode, and full punctuation support with a customizable quick list. Two-finger gestures handle things like send, close keyboard, switch keyboard, and voice input.
          Everything works with TalkBack. I built this because FlickType was a fantastic keyboard for blind iOS users and then it was gone. Nothing like it existed on Android, so I made one.
          It's free, no ads, no tracking, no metrics. I'm not evil.

          Edit: Now on 2.0 with multiple languages supported.

          If you find TapType useful, consider supporting its development:
          https://paypal.me/aaronhewitt
          https://github.com/sponsors/aaron-gh
          https://liberapay.com/fireborn/

          Download: https://github.com/aaron-gh/taptype-releases/releases/latest
          #TapType #Accessibility #A11y #Android #Blind #VisuallyImpaired #TalkBack #Keyboard #AssistiveTech

          larozeppeli@plasmatrap.comL This user is from outside of this forum
          larozeppeli@plasmatrap.comL This user is from outside of this forum
          larozeppeli@plasmatrap.com
          wrote sidst redigeret af
          #88

          @fireborn@dragonscave.space where's the repo with the source?

          F 1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • larozeppeli@plasmatrap.comL larozeppeli@plasmatrap.com

            @fireborn@dragonscave.space where's the repo with the source?

            F This user is from outside of this forum
            F This user is from outside of this forum
            fireborn@dragonscave.space
            wrote sidst redigeret af
            #89

            @larozeppeli Source code isn't publicly avilable yet.

            larozeppeli@plasmatrap.comL 1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • F fireborn@dragonscave.space

              @larozeppeli Source code isn't publicly avilable yet.

              larozeppeli@plasmatrap.comL This user is from outside of this forum
              larozeppeli@plasmatrap.comL This user is from outside of this forum
              larozeppeli@plasmatrap.com
              wrote sidst redigeret af
              #90

              @fireborn@dragonscave.space because...?

              F 1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • larozeppeli@plasmatrap.comL larozeppeli@plasmatrap.com

                @fireborn@dragonscave.space because...?

                F This user is from outside of this forum
                F This user is from outside of this forum
                fireborn@dragonscave.space
                wrote sidst redigeret af
                #91

                @larozeppeli I'm sorry, I wasn't aware on fedi you had to justify software distribution decisions. Because the code is a bit of a mess, as it was originally tied into another project that I then brought it out of because that project is months away and this solves a problem right now.

                larozeppeli@plasmatrap.comL 1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • F fireborn@dragonscave.space

                  @larozeppeli I'm sorry, I wasn't aware on fedi you had to justify software distribution decisions. Because the code is a bit of a mess, as it was originally tied into another project that I then brought it out of because that project is months away and this solves a problem right now.

                  larozeppeli@plasmatrap.comL This user is from outside of this forum
                  larozeppeli@plasmatrap.comL This user is from outside of this forum
                  larozeppeli@plasmatrap.com
                  wrote sidst redigeret af
                  #92

                  @fireborn@dragonscave.space I don't see how the code being messy makes it bad for you to release it, I just have the hunch its malware but I really like the idea so it would be nice to see the source

                  F 1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • F fireborn@dragonscave.space

                    TapType is out. It's a keyboard for blind Android users.
                    There are no visible keys. You tap where QWERTY keys would be from muscle memory, and a spatial prediction algorithm figures out what you meant. It scores nearby keys using a Gaussian proximity model and runs a beam search against an 80,000 word dictionary. You don't need to be precise. That's the whole point.
                    Swipe right to commit a word. Swipe down or up to cycle through suggestions. Swipe left to delete. It learns what words you use most and ranks them higher over time, and you can add your own words to a personal dictionary.
                    Every letter has its own unique sound, from Andre Louis's keyboard sound recordings, so you can learn to identify keys by ear without relying on speech. Each swipe direction has a distinct sound too. TTS is there when you want it, adjustable speed, and you can turn it off entirely if you prefer sounds only.
                    It has emoji search with skin tone selection and favourites, a number pad mode, an upper case mode, and full punctuation support with a customizable quick list. Two-finger gestures handle things like send, close keyboard, switch keyboard, and voice input.
                    Everything works with TalkBack. I built this because FlickType was a fantastic keyboard for blind iOS users and then it was gone. Nothing like it existed on Android, so I made one.
                    It's free, no ads, no tracking, no metrics. I'm not evil.

                    Edit: Now on 2.0 with multiple languages supported.

                    If you find TapType useful, consider supporting its development:
                    https://paypal.me/aaronhewitt
                    https://github.com/sponsors/aaron-gh
                    https://liberapay.com/fireborn/

                    Download: https://github.com/aaron-gh/taptype-releases/releases/latest
                    #TapType #Accessibility #A11y #Android #Blind #VisuallyImpaired #TalkBack #Keyboard #AssistiveTech

                    x0@dragonscave.spaceX This user is from outside of this forum
                    x0@dragonscave.spaceX This user is from outside of this forum
                    x0@dragonscave.space
                    wrote sidst redigeret af
                    #93

                    @fireborn OMG dude if I had flicktype back on iOS I might have a reason to get a bigger phone.

                    N 1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • larozeppeli@plasmatrap.comL larozeppeli@plasmatrap.com

                      @fireborn@dragonscave.space I don't see how the code being messy makes it bad for you to release it, I just have the hunch its malware but I really like the idea so it would be nice to see the source

                      F This user is from outside of this forum
                      F This user is from outside of this forum
                      fireborn@dragonscave.space
                      wrote sidst redigeret af
                      #94

                      @larozeppeli It isn't malware, but if you don't want to you don't have to turn on the accessibility service. It doesn't request any other permissions, other than record audio if you don't have a voice input IM configured and try to use that feature. You can reject everything and block network access and everything will still work. It doesn't even make network connections. I thought about including an updater like my MUD client has, but decided against it because fundamentally I'm against an input method having any network connectivity.

                      larozeppeli@plasmatrap.comL qgustavor@urusai.socialQ 2 Replies Last reply
                      0
                      • F fireborn@dragonscave.space

                        @larozeppeli It isn't malware, but if you don't want to you don't have to turn on the accessibility service. It doesn't request any other permissions, other than record audio if you don't have a voice input IM configured and try to use that feature. You can reject everything and block network access and everything will still work. It doesn't even make network connections. I thought about including an updater like my MUD client has, but decided against it because fundamentally I'm against an input method having any network connectivity.

                        larozeppeli@plasmatrap.comL This user is from outside of this forum
                        larozeppeli@plasmatrap.comL This user is from outside of this forum
                        larozeppeli@plasmatrap.com
                        wrote sidst redigeret af
                        #95

                        @fireborn@dragonscave.space I'm not installing it until I see (pun intended) the source, what's the big deal?

                        1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • F fireborn@dragonscave.space

                          TapType is out. It's a keyboard for blind Android users.
                          There are no visible keys. You tap where QWERTY keys would be from muscle memory, and a spatial prediction algorithm figures out what you meant. It scores nearby keys using a Gaussian proximity model and runs a beam search against an 80,000 word dictionary. You don't need to be precise. That's the whole point.
                          Swipe right to commit a word. Swipe down or up to cycle through suggestions. Swipe left to delete. It learns what words you use most and ranks them higher over time, and you can add your own words to a personal dictionary.
                          Every letter has its own unique sound, from Andre Louis's keyboard sound recordings, so you can learn to identify keys by ear without relying on speech. Each swipe direction has a distinct sound too. TTS is there when you want it, adjustable speed, and you can turn it off entirely if you prefer sounds only.
                          It has emoji search with skin tone selection and favourites, a number pad mode, an upper case mode, and full punctuation support with a customizable quick list. Two-finger gestures handle things like send, close keyboard, switch keyboard, and voice input.
                          Everything works with TalkBack. I built this because FlickType was a fantastic keyboard for blind iOS users and then it was gone. Nothing like it existed on Android, so I made one.
                          It's free, no ads, no tracking, no metrics. I'm not evil.

                          Edit: Now on 2.0 with multiple languages supported.

                          If you find TapType useful, consider supporting its development:
                          https://paypal.me/aaronhewitt
                          https://github.com/sponsors/aaron-gh
                          https://liberapay.com/fireborn/

                          Download: https://github.com/aaron-gh/taptype-releases/releases/latest
                          #TapType #Accessibility #A11y #Android #Blind #VisuallyImpaired #TalkBack #Keyboard #AssistiveTech

                          retrosponge@kind.socialR This user is from outside of this forum
                          retrosponge@kind.socialR This user is from outside of this forum
                          retrosponge@kind.social
                          wrote sidst redigeret af
                          #96

                          @fireborn I'm sighted and honestly this sounds better than most existing keyboards.

                          F 1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • retrosponge@kind.socialR retrosponge@kind.social

                            @fireborn I'm sighted and honestly this sounds better than most existing keyboards.

                            F This user is from outside of this forum
                            F This user is from outside of this forum
                            fireborn@dragonscave.space
                            wrote sidst redigeret af
                            #97

                            @retrosponge Feel free to try it. I haven't tested it for sighted users, but if you can come up with actionable ways I could make it better I'm all ears. You'll still have the tts output because that is sort of the point, but feel free to turn it off if you find it unhelpful.

                            retrosponge@kind.socialR 1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • F fireborn@dragonscave.space

                              @retrosponge Feel free to try it. I haven't tested it for sighted users, but if you can come up with actionable ways I could make it better I'm all ears. You'll still have the tts output because that is sort of the point, but feel free to turn it off if you find it unhelpful.

                              retrosponge@kind.socialR This user is from outside of this forum
                              retrosponge@kind.socialR This user is from outside of this forum
                              retrosponge@kind.social
                              wrote sidst redigeret af
                              #98

                              @fireborn I will give it a look.

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • F fireborn@dragonscave.space

                                @larozeppeli It isn't malware, but if you don't want to you don't have to turn on the accessibility service. It doesn't request any other permissions, other than record audio if you don't have a voice input IM configured and try to use that feature. You can reject everything and block network access and everything will still work. It doesn't even make network connections. I thought about including an updater like my MUD client has, but decided against it because fundamentally I'm against an input method having any network connectivity.

                                qgustavor@urusai.socialQ This user is from outside of this forum
                                qgustavor@urusai.socialQ This user is from outside of this forum
                                qgustavor@urusai.social
                                wrote sidst redigeret af
                                #99

                                @fireborn @larozeppeli Let me tell you one thing:

                                You are on the Fediverse, people here is using a social network with less people than closed source alternatives because (at least for many people) they like the idea of open source, so they expect apps to be open source.

                                If your code is bad, people can help you. As long you didn't put a password or API key on there, you can just publish it.

                                If you hide the source code, people might not trust you, people might think your code might be malware (even if you say it isn't) or have a hidden bad thing.

                                You will have more luck having people to download your closed-source app by sharing it on closed-source social networks, people there don't bother about it. People here bother about it. People here bother about their security and privacy.

                                jannem@fosstodon.orgJ 1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • F fireborn@dragonscave.space

                                  TapType is out. It's a keyboard for blind Android users.
                                  There are no visible keys. You tap where QWERTY keys would be from muscle memory, and a spatial prediction algorithm figures out what you meant. It scores nearby keys using a Gaussian proximity model and runs a beam search against an 80,000 word dictionary. You don't need to be precise. That's the whole point.
                                  Swipe right to commit a word. Swipe down or up to cycle through suggestions. Swipe left to delete. It learns what words you use most and ranks them higher over time, and you can add your own words to a personal dictionary.
                                  Every letter has its own unique sound, from Andre Louis's keyboard sound recordings, so you can learn to identify keys by ear without relying on speech. Each swipe direction has a distinct sound too. TTS is there when you want it, adjustable speed, and you can turn it off entirely if you prefer sounds only.
                                  It has emoji search with skin tone selection and favourites, a number pad mode, an upper case mode, and full punctuation support with a customizable quick list. Two-finger gestures handle things like send, close keyboard, switch keyboard, and voice input.
                                  Everything works with TalkBack. I built this because FlickType was a fantastic keyboard for blind iOS users and then it was gone. Nothing like it existed on Android, so I made one.
                                  It's free, no ads, no tracking, no metrics. I'm not evil.

                                  Edit: Now on 2.0 with multiple languages supported.

                                  If you find TapType useful, consider supporting its development:
                                  https://paypal.me/aaronhewitt
                                  https://github.com/sponsors/aaron-gh
                                  https://liberapay.com/fireborn/

                                  Download: https://github.com/aaron-gh/taptype-releases/releases/latest
                                  #TapType #Accessibility #A11y #Android #Blind #VisuallyImpaired #TalkBack #Keyboard #AssistiveTech

                                  bill@mastodon.n6.ioB This user is from outside of this forum
                                  bill@mastodon.n6.ioB This user is from outside of this forum
                                  bill@mastodon.n6.io
                                  wrote sidst redigeret af
                                  #100

                                  @fireborn @alexhall Haven’t tested this yet, but this sounds great! Especially because we might be able to run it in work profiles (the TalkBack Braille IME can’t run there). In place of pure beam search against a dictionary, have you considered something like GPT-2 or another very small (by modern standards) language model? You’d probably get near-realtime inference on most mobile chips. Also the source code doesn’t seem to be in that repo

                                  1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • F fireborn@dragonscave.space

                                    TapType is out. It's a keyboard for blind Android users.
                                    There are no visible keys. You tap where QWERTY keys would be from muscle memory, and a spatial prediction algorithm figures out what you meant. It scores nearby keys using a Gaussian proximity model and runs a beam search against an 80,000 word dictionary. You don't need to be precise. That's the whole point.
                                    Swipe right to commit a word. Swipe down or up to cycle through suggestions. Swipe left to delete. It learns what words you use most and ranks them higher over time, and you can add your own words to a personal dictionary.
                                    Every letter has its own unique sound, from Andre Louis's keyboard sound recordings, so you can learn to identify keys by ear without relying on speech. Each swipe direction has a distinct sound too. TTS is there when you want it, adjustable speed, and you can turn it off entirely if you prefer sounds only.
                                    It has emoji search with skin tone selection and favourites, a number pad mode, an upper case mode, and full punctuation support with a customizable quick list. Two-finger gestures handle things like send, close keyboard, switch keyboard, and voice input.
                                    Everything works with TalkBack. I built this because FlickType was a fantastic keyboard for blind iOS users and then it was gone. Nothing like it existed on Android, so I made one.
                                    It's free, no ads, no tracking, no metrics. I'm not evil.

                                    Edit: Now on 2.0 with multiple languages supported.

                                    If you find TapType useful, consider supporting its development:
                                    https://paypal.me/aaronhewitt
                                    https://github.com/sponsors/aaron-gh
                                    https://liberapay.com/fireborn/

                                    Download: https://github.com/aaron-gh/taptype-releases/releases/latest
                                    #TapType #Accessibility #A11y #Android #Blind #VisuallyImpaired #TalkBack #Keyboard #AssistiveTech

                                    R This user is from outside of this forum
                                    R This user is from outside of this forum
                                    randomfire@fwoof.space
                                    wrote sidst redigeret af
                                    #101

                                    @FreakyFwoof @fireborn This is awesome! I've bookmarked it and might have to give it a look. 🙂 I also miss flicktype.

                                    1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • F fireborn@dragonscave.space

                                      TapType is out. It's a keyboard for blind Android users.
                                      There are no visible keys. You tap where QWERTY keys would be from muscle memory, and a spatial prediction algorithm figures out what you meant. It scores nearby keys using a Gaussian proximity model and runs a beam search against an 80,000 word dictionary. You don't need to be precise. That's the whole point.
                                      Swipe right to commit a word. Swipe down or up to cycle through suggestions. Swipe left to delete. It learns what words you use most and ranks them higher over time, and you can add your own words to a personal dictionary.
                                      Every letter has its own unique sound, from Andre Louis's keyboard sound recordings, so you can learn to identify keys by ear without relying on speech. Each swipe direction has a distinct sound too. TTS is there when you want it, adjustable speed, and you can turn it off entirely if you prefer sounds only.
                                      It has emoji search with skin tone selection and favourites, a number pad mode, an upper case mode, and full punctuation support with a customizable quick list. Two-finger gestures handle things like send, close keyboard, switch keyboard, and voice input.
                                      Everything works with TalkBack. I built this because FlickType was a fantastic keyboard for blind iOS users and then it was gone. Nothing like it existed on Android, so I made one.
                                      It's free, no ads, no tracking, no metrics. I'm not evil.

                                      Edit: Now on 2.0 with multiple languages supported.

                                      If you find TapType useful, consider supporting its development:
                                      https://paypal.me/aaronhewitt
                                      https://github.com/sponsors/aaron-gh
                                      https://liberapay.com/fireborn/

                                      Download: https://github.com/aaron-gh/taptype-releases/releases/latest
                                      #TapType #Accessibility #A11y #Android #Blind #VisuallyImpaired #TalkBack #Keyboard #AssistiveTech

                                      muchanchoasado@tkz.oneM This user is from outside of this forum
                                      muchanchoasado@tkz.oneM This user is from outside of this forum
                                      muchanchoasado@tkz.one
                                      wrote sidst redigeret af
                                      #102

                                      @fireborn This is awesome! I hope the keyboard becomes multilingual at some point, I'd love to use it in Spanish.

                                      J 1 Reply Last reply
                                      0
                                      • F fireborn@dragonscave.space

                                        TapType is out. It's a keyboard for blind Android users.
                                        There are no visible keys. You tap where QWERTY keys would be from muscle memory, and a spatial prediction algorithm figures out what you meant. It scores nearby keys using a Gaussian proximity model and runs a beam search against an 80,000 word dictionary. You don't need to be precise. That's the whole point.
                                        Swipe right to commit a word. Swipe down or up to cycle through suggestions. Swipe left to delete. It learns what words you use most and ranks them higher over time, and you can add your own words to a personal dictionary.
                                        Every letter has its own unique sound, from Andre Louis's keyboard sound recordings, so you can learn to identify keys by ear without relying on speech. Each swipe direction has a distinct sound too. TTS is there when you want it, adjustable speed, and you can turn it off entirely if you prefer sounds only.
                                        It has emoji search with skin tone selection and favourites, a number pad mode, an upper case mode, and full punctuation support with a customizable quick list. Two-finger gestures handle things like send, close keyboard, switch keyboard, and voice input.
                                        Everything works with TalkBack. I built this because FlickType was a fantastic keyboard for blind iOS users and then it was gone. Nothing like it existed on Android, so I made one.
                                        It's free, no ads, no tracking, no metrics. I'm not evil.

                                        Edit: Now on 2.0 with multiple languages supported.

                                        If you find TapType useful, consider supporting its development:
                                        https://paypal.me/aaronhewitt
                                        https://github.com/sponsors/aaron-gh
                                        https://liberapay.com/fireborn/

                                        Download: https://github.com/aaron-gh/taptype-releases/releases/latest
                                        #TapType #Accessibility #A11y #Android #Blind #VisuallyImpaired #TalkBack #Keyboard #AssistiveTech

                                        Q This user is from outside of this forum
                                        Q This user is from outside of this forum
                                        quanchi@dragonscave.space
                                        wrote sidst redigeret af
                                        #103

                                        @fireborn Finally, a flicktype successor. I'll give it a try. I will probably make it my main when you add multiple languages available or Arabic to be more specific. Congrats on the release.

                                        F 1 Reply Last reply
                                        0
                                        • F fireborn@dragonscave.space

                                          TapType is out. It's a keyboard for blind Android users.
                                          There are no visible keys. You tap where QWERTY keys would be from muscle memory, and a spatial prediction algorithm figures out what you meant. It scores nearby keys using a Gaussian proximity model and runs a beam search against an 80,000 word dictionary. You don't need to be precise. That's the whole point.
                                          Swipe right to commit a word. Swipe down or up to cycle through suggestions. Swipe left to delete. It learns what words you use most and ranks them higher over time, and you can add your own words to a personal dictionary.
                                          Every letter has its own unique sound, from Andre Louis's keyboard sound recordings, so you can learn to identify keys by ear without relying on speech. Each swipe direction has a distinct sound too. TTS is there when you want it, adjustable speed, and you can turn it off entirely if you prefer sounds only.
                                          It has emoji search with skin tone selection and favourites, a number pad mode, an upper case mode, and full punctuation support with a customizable quick list. Two-finger gestures handle things like send, close keyboard, switch keyboard, and voice input.
                                          Everything works with TalkBack. I built this because FlickType was a fantastic keyboard for blind iOS users and then it was gone. Nothing like it existed on Android, so I made one.
                                          It's free, no ads, no tracking, no metrics. I'm not evil.

                                          Edit: Now on 2.0 with multiple languages supported.

                                          If you find TapType useful, consider supporting its development:
                                          https://paypal.me/aaronhewitt
                                          https://github.com/sponsors/aaron-gh
                                          https://liberapay.com/fireborn/

                                          Download: https://github.com/aaron-gh/taptype-releases/releases/latest
                                          #TapType #Accessibility #A11y #Android #Blind #VisuallyImpaired #TalkBack #Keyboard #AssistiveTech

                                          aburka@hachyderm.ioA This user is from outside of this forum
                                          aburka@hachyderm.ioA This user is from outside of this forum
                                          aburka@hachyderm.io
                                          wrote sidst redigeret af
                                          #104

                                          @fireborn Pretty cool! Found a couple of bugs for your enjoyment:

                                          - in full screen landscape mode, the hide keyboard button doesn't work
                                          - inserting punctuation deletes the character before the cursor, even if it wasn't the automatically inserted space

                                          Pixel 7 Android 16

                                          aburka@hachyderm.ioA F 3 Replies Last reply
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