So there I was, dropping Quicksilver off at her play-date.
The mother of a different child was also doing a drop-off.
She was sitting and texting and it wasn't like any other kind of texting I had ever seen before.
She was holding the phone in "landscape mode" and her thumbs skated across the virtual keyboard and she rarely lifted them.
I week or so later I worked up the courage to ask her about what she had been doing. There is something creepy about people who are watching other people text and I didn't want to come across as "that guy".
She gladly told me that if you tweak-in the dwell-time required for your phone to register a letter, you can glide your thumbs across the screen without lifting them. The time it takes a thumb to reverse or change direction is enough to make the device "read" that character.
She also pointed out that, like touch-typing, it pays to not look at the keys but to watch the "auto correct" or suggestions at the top. When the work you are keying out appears, glide up there and tag it.
She seemed to think that the cursive method of texting (a made-up term) worked better on some phones than other. It may be because of differences in operating systems and the amount of control they offer the user in setting dwell times, or maybe it relates to the quality of the screens.
And now you know.
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