Beginning in May, Microsoft is removing third-party login options from its popular SwiftKey smartphone keyboard app.
Microsoft's widely used SwiftKey keyboard for Android and iOS will soon require a Microsoft account for backups.
SwiftKey, a virtual keyboard for Android and iOS, will now require a Microsoft account, with users’ data moved to OneDrive. Users still have until May 31st to migrate their accounts or find a ...
SwiftKey, one of the more popular mobile keyboards on the planet (check your phone), will be changing in the next couple of ...
The post SwiftKey will Soon Mandate Microsoft Account for Login appeared first on Android Headlines.
Microsoft is shutting down legacy SwiftKey logins this May, moving all learned typing data to OneDrive.
Starting May 31st, 2026, the Microsoft-owned SwiftKey will stop supporting Google and Apple accounts, according to Windows Central. Though you don’t need an account to use SwiftKey on its own, you’ll ...
Chethan is a reporter at Android Police, focusing on the weekend news coverage for the site. He has covered tech for over a decade with multiple publications, including the likes of Times Internet, ...
Microsoft is buying SwiftKey, the developer of a popular software keyboard for Android and iOS phones — even though it already has its own software keyboard, Word Flow. Software keyboards such as ...
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WICHITA, Kan. (KWCH) -How many times have you tried to send a text and auto-correct makes all the wrong corrections? If you text a lot that number is probably pretty high. The default keyboards that ...