Hi everyone. I’m close to buying a Unihertz Jelly Star (this nugget here). One of the last things keeping me away from ordering is my concern with typing quality. (“Say what, on a three inch screen??”)

Normal qwery-keyboards won’t cut it, and thus I’m looking for recommendations on software keyboards for either tiny screens or super fat fingers. As I don’t love auto correct, are there any T9-like keyboards for Android (9 keys is quite few, but how about like half of the keys of a full size keyboard)? Also, is there a way to install WearOS (or whatever Google calls it this week) keyboards on a normal Android phone?

If you’ve got either very fat fingers or a tiny screen, hit me with the keyboard apps you’re using. Thanks a lot!

  • pixelscience@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    I can’t help you with the keyboard recommendations, but I just want to say that thing is hilarious. I kinda want to buy one just for shits and giggles when I whip it out at the bar.

  • monotremata@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    I just use swipe typing, but my dad absolutely loves MessagEase, which is basically a 9-key keyboard. The gimmick is that every letter is a gesture; nine letters are just taps, and everything else (including some punctuation) you start on one of those nine keys and swipe in one of eight directions (up, left, upper left, etc.). I think there are a couple of other large keys, like a space bar at the bottom and delete and “switch to numbers and extra punctuation” on the right, but you mainly use the nine for words. It’s not terrible, and he’s gotten moderately fast at it. Might be worth a look.

    Edit: Oh, I’ve just seen that MessagEase is now unmaintained, and the “thumbkey” mentioned in another comment is basically a replacement. So I guess this is just another recommendation for that keyboard! Oops.

  • menturi@lemdro.id
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    1 year ago

    I use a compact mode in AnySoftKeyboard, which might work well for tiny screens! The keyboard is only 5 keys wide, and most keys have two corresponding letters (double tapping to type those letters). It is quite nice even on normal sized phones for individuals who are prone to mis-tapping resulting in typos like myself, I recommend giving it a try.

    • ChiefPockets@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I second AnySoft! I use a full size layout, but absolutely love all of the customization available in other aspects (keyboard size/location, autocorrect, symbol keyboards, gesture features, etc.).

  • Ook the Librarian@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I use MessagEase keyboard. It’s a has sizable learning curve. When I was learning I would only do crosswords. But now it’s basically all I use on my phone in most situations. I would consider it quite close to T9

    • Communist@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      You should replace it with thumbkey, it’s even made by the Lemmy devs!

      • Ook the Librarian@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Fuck. While you’re right, I am not learning a new a layout. I imagine that I can customize the layout to be like mine. But I’m lazy.

        I retract my recommendation though. OP, listen to this guy.

  • Chaphasilor [he/him]@feddit.nl
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    1 year ago

    I actually have a friend that uses such a small phone, they use a regular querty keyboard, just usually in combination with glide/swipe typing. I don’t think you can install WearOS keyboards, and afaik the default keyboard on WearOS is a full-size querty anyway…