Yesterday I texted someone: "He is completely out of his ming." It should have read: "He is completely out of his mind." iPhone corrected: "He is completely out of his Ming."
If they're suing because iPhone's predictions are crap, I support them.
Yesterday I texted someone: "He is completely out of his ming." It should have read: "He is completely out of his mind." iPhone corrected: "He is completely out of his Ming."
If they're suing because iPhone's predictions are crap, I support them.
It would have been funnier if Google had suggested adding an "e" to the end of that one!
Yesterday I texted someone: "He is completely out of his ming." It should have read: "He is completely out of his mind." iPhone corrected: "He is completely out of his Ming."
If they're suing because iPhone's predictions are crap, I support them.
It would have been funnier if Google had suggested adding an "e" to the end of that one!
You mean Apple not Google. Google is excellent correcting spelling.
Sometimes I’ve mangled words so badly, I couldn’t read it back phonetically.
Google still suggests the correct word... I look around suspiciously.... How the @#$& did Google know that’s what I meant? I suspect a mind reading scanner embedded in the smoke (fire alarm) detector. The little red light gave it away... Tin foil hat applied. Now Ming can correct my spelling though...right?
Just looked up RE43,633 - while it is held by Sentius it has nothing to do with spell checking and neither does 7,672,985. I think they are trying to draw a very long bow with this suit.
I don’t know about the strength of the case, but Apple’s “spellcheck” is crap.
I’m an excellent speller, but I’m not here to brag: I want to pass on a tip to help you avoid “bad” spellcheckers and save a lot of time.
Make a list of the words you routinely misspell. For me, one of them was “obsolesecence.” Once you see the correct spelling, strike through the word on your list and put in the correct spelling. Practice writing it a few times — for me, the key was remembering that the middle part was SOLE like the bottom of a shoe (or the fish). This will train your brain towards the correct spelling.
Hope that helps!
Not really. I don’t have time to write out the 1000+ words I misspell occasionally and study them. Because I’ll just forget the correct spelling before the next time I use them.
For example, I wrote cocain in another article and Apple made no suggestions. Google kindly told me to add an “e” on the end.
How about rather than me doing the work, Apple fix their crappy spellchecker? These are the kind of things personal computers were invented for... Microsoft hasn’t had a problem fixing my spelling since my first computer decades ago...
My iPhone has the computing power to run hundreds (thousands?) of moon landing simulations at the same time... but it can’t spellcheck?
Actually this isn’t Apple’s spellchecker at fault here it’s the fault of the system used by AppleInsider and others. It doesn’t trigger the built in spell checker and therefore the spell checker won’t pick up the failing.
It’s rather common in web pages for this to happen.
Yesterday I texted someone: "He is completely out of his ming." It should have read: "He is completely out of his mind." iPhone corrected: "He is completely out of his Ming."
If they're suing because iPhone's predictions are crap, I support them.
I don’t know about the strength of the case, but Apple’s “spellcheck” is crap.
I’m an excellent speller, but I’m not here to brag: I want to pass on a tip to help you avoid “bad” spellcheckers and save a lot of time.
Make a list of the words you routinely misspell. For me, one of them was “obsolesecence.” Once you see the correct spelling, strike through the word on your list and put in the correct spelling. Practice writing it a few times — for me, the key was remembering that the middle part was SOLE like the bottom of a shoe (or the fish). This will train your brain towards the correct spelling.
Hope that helps!
Not really. I don’t have time to write out the 1000+ words I misspell occasionally and study them. Because I’ll just forget the correct spelling before the next time I use them.
For example, I wrote cocain in another article and Apple made no suggestions. Google kindly told me to add an “e” on the end.
How about rather than me doing the work, Apple fix their crappy spellchecker? These are the kind of things personal computers were invented for... Microsoft hasn’t had a problem fixing my spelling since my first computer decades ago...
My iPhone has the computing power to run hundreds (thousands?) of moon landing simulations at the same time... but it can’t spellcheck?
Actually this isn’t Apple’s spellchecker at fault here it’s the fault of the system used by AppleInsider and others. It doesn’t trigger the built in spell checker and therefore the spell checker won’t pick up the failing.
It’s rather common in web pages for this to happen.
I don't know where the blame lies but I know for 100% certain that I get the "red underline" (patent infringement?) if I misspeel (misspell) something like I just did here on Apple Insider. I think your browser may be the culprit as I'm using Chrome and I'll assume you use Safari?
Yesterday I texted someone: "He is completely out of his ming." It should have read: "He is completely out of his mind." iPhone corrected: "He is completely out of his Ming."
If they're suing because iPhone's predictions are crap, I support them.
Safari uses the built-in system spell checker. Misspell a word and/or know it isn’t misspelled then tell the app learn the spelling in the future. I write novels with unique names that get highlighted as misspelled so I bring up the submenu and tell the application to learn the spelling of this character name. With nearly 1 Million words in the English language don’t expect any spelling dictionary to have them all.
Firefox uses its own spelling engine and Chrome uses Google servers for there engine data mining your activity inside Chrome continuously.
I don’t know about the strength of the case, but Apple’s “spellcheck” is crap.
I’m an excellent speller, but I’m not here to brag: I want to pass on a tip to help you avoid “bad” spellcheckers and save a lot of time.
Make a list of the words you routinely misspell. For me, one of them was “obsolesecence.” Once you see the correct spelling, strike through the word on your list and put in the correct spelling. Practice writing it a few times — for me, the key was remembering that the middle part was SOLE like the bottom of a shoe (or the fish). This will train your brain towards the correct spelling.
Hope that helps!
Not really. I don’t have time to write out the 1000+ words I misspell occasionally and study them. Because I’ll just forget the correct spelling before the next time I use them.
For example, I wrote cocain in another article and Apple made no suggestions. Google kindly told me to add an “e” on the end.
How about rather than me doing the work, Apple fix their crappy spellchecker? These are the kind of things personal computers were invented for... Microsoft hasn’t had a problem fixing my spelling since my first computer decades ago...
My iPhone has the computing power to run hundreds (thousands?) of moon landing simulations at the same time... but it can’t spellcheck?
Actually this isn’t Apple’s spellchecker at fault here it’s the fault of the system used by AppleInsider and others. It doesn’t trigger the built in spell checker and therefore the spell checker won’t pick up the failing.
It’s rather common in web pages for this to happen.
I don't know where the blame lies but I know for 100% certain that I get the "red underline" (patent infringement?) if I misspeel (misspell) something like I just did here on Apple Insider. I think your browser may be the culprit as I'm using Chrome and I'll assume you use Safari?
Yes I am using Safari because I would rather have my eyeballs ripped out my nostrils by rabid wolverines than use Chrome.
Incidentally I literally just misspelled nostrils and it autocorrected so I'm not entirely convinced the argument is valid. I'd check the settings you have on your dictionary and maybe add more English dictionaries to the list. I just tried to do cocain as well and I'm getting a red line and it even suggested a word although it was the plural of cocaine which apparently is cocaines.
I don’t know about the strength of the case, but Apple’s “spellcheck” is crap.
I’m an excellent speller, but I’m not here to brag: I want to pass on a tip to help you avoid “bad” spellcheckers and save a lot of time.
Make a list of the words you routinely misspell. For me, one of them was “obsolesecence.” Once you see the correct spelling, strike through the word on your list and put in the correct spelling. Practice writing it a few times — for me, the key was remembering that the middle part was SOLE like the bottom of a shoe (or the fish). This will train your brain towards the correct spelling.
Hope that helps!
Not really. I don’t have time to write out the 1000+ words I misspell occasionally and study them. Because I’ll just forget the correct spelling before the next time I use them.
For example, I wrote cocain in another article and Apple made no suggestions. Google kindly told me to add an “e” on the end.
How about rather than me doing the work, Apple fix their crappy spellchecker? These are the kind of things personal computers were invented for... Microsoft hasn’t had a problem fixing my spelling since my first computer decades ago...
My iPhone has the computing power to run hundreds (thousands?) of moon landing simulations at the same time... but it can’t spellcheck?
Actually this isn’t Apple’s spellchecker at fault here it’s the fault of the system used by AppleInsider and others. It doesn’t trigger the built in spell checker and therefore the spell checker won’t pick up the failing.
It’s rather common in web pages for this to happen.
I don't know where the blame lies but I know for 100% certain that I get the "red underline" (patent infringement?) if I misspeel (misspell) something like I just did here on Apple Insider. I think your browser may be the culprit as I'm using Chrome and I'll assume you use Safari?
Yes I am using Safari because I would rather have my eyeballs ripped out my nostrils by rabid wolverines than use Chrome.
Incidentally I literally just misspelled nostrils and it autocorrected so I'm not entirely convinced the argument is valid. I'd check the settings you have on your dictionary and maybe add more English dictionaries to the list. I just tried to do cocain as well and I'm getting a red line and it even suggested a word although it was the plural of cocaine which apparently is cocaines.
Pretty sure it was you that said Apple's spell-correct doesn't work with posts in this forum. "Actually this isn’t Apple’s spellchecker at fault here it’s the fault of the system used by AppleInsider and others. It’s rather common in web pages for this to happen."
I pointed it wasn't a forum software fault as far as I can tell but instead might be a browser issue if the problem occurs.
Now you're saying you were wrong to assume that? No problem then.
I don’t know about the strength of the case, but Apple’s “spellcheck” is crap.
I’m an excellent speller, but I’m not here to brag: I want to pass on a tip to help you avoid “bad” spellcheckers and save a lot of time.
Make a list of the words you routinely misspell. For me, one of them was “obsolesecence.” Once you see the correct spelling, strike through the word on your list and put in the correct spelling. Practice writing it a few times — for me, the key was remembering that the middle part was SOLE like the bottom of a shoe (or the fish). This will train your brain towards the correct spelling.
Hope that helps!
Not really. I don’t have time to write out the 1000+ words I misspell occasionally and study them. Because I’ll just forget the correct spelling before the next time I use them.
For example, I wrote cocain in another article and Apple made no suggestions. Google kindly told me to add an “e” on the end.
How about rather than me doing the work, Apple fix their crappy spellchecker? These are the kind of things personal computers were invented for... Microsoft hasn’t had a problem fixing my spelling since my first computer decades ago...
My iPhone has the computing power to run hundreds (thousands?) of moon landing simulations at the same time... but it can’t spellcheck?
Actually this isn’t Apple’s spellchecker at fault here it’s the fault of the system used by AppleInsider and others. It doesn’t trigger the built in spell checker and therefore the spell checker won’t pick up the failing.
It’s rather common in web pages for this to happen.
The forum text boxes here actively break autocorrect on iOS. Facebook website (again, via Safari on iOS) is actually worse: you get to keep both your original garbage text AND the correction.
It should be an interesting case: suing for damages on something which doesn’t work. Not a great advertisement for your next project. Will Apple counter-sue on the basis the software is rubbish?
Comments
The PowerMac 6500 was my second. Still have it.
Were you texting Flash Gordan?
Sometimes I’ve mangled words so badly, I couldn’t read it back phonetically.
Google still suggests the correct word...
I look around suspiciously....
How the @#$& did Google know that’s what I meant?
I suspect a mind reading scanner embedded in the smoke (fire alarm) detector. The little red light gave it away...
Tin foil hat applied. Now Ming can correct my spelling though...right?
It’s rather common in web pages for this to happen.
Firefox uses its own spelling engine and Chrome uses Google servers for there engine data mining your activity inside Chrome continuously.
Incidentally I literally just misspelled nostrils and it autocorrected so I'm not entirely convinced the argument is valid. I'd check the settings you have on your dictionary and maybe add more English dictionaries to the list. I just tried to do cocain as well and I'm getting a red line and it even suggested a word although it was the plural of cocaine which apparently is cocaines.
"Actually this isn’t Apple’s spellchecker at fault here it’s the fault of the system used by AppleInsider and others. It’s rather common in web pages for this to happen."
I pointed it wasn't a forum software fault as far as I can tell but instead might be a browser issue if the problem occurs.
Now you're saying you were wrong to assume that? No problem then.