Friday, 13 December 2013

LIFESTYLE

The Detachable Keyboard That Gives Your Iphone A Blackberry Makeover… And Prompted A $1million Dollar Investment From US TV Host Ryan Seacrest


For BlackBerry users, taking a leap of faith and ditching a QWERTY keyboard for a touchscreen phone can be daunting.

To solve this, a company backed by US TV presenter Ryan Seacrest has attempted to bridge the gap by creating a physical keyboard that slides onto touchscreen phones - although it comes at a price. The Typo Keyboard costs $99 (N16,236) and is due to launch in January for iPhone 5 and iPhone 5S handsets. Other smartphones and tablet versions will then follow later next year.



Seacrest is said to have invested $1million in the phone keyboard, and he is shown as a co-founder on the Type Products company website. Although the keyboard slides onto the bottom of the phone, it actually connects to the software via Bluetooth. When a user wants to write a message, email or Facebook post, for example, they can type on the physical keyboard and the key strokes will be sent wirelessly to the phone in real-time.

The case adds a quarter of an inch thickness to the Apple handset, and around an inch to the length. According to the Typo Products site: ‘When we set out to design the Typo Keyboard, our goal was simple: create a keyboard and case that would add the absolute minimum additional length and thickness to the iPhone, while still providing protection to the phone and a butter-smooth, tactile typing experience.’



The gadget is set to launch at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas in January. ‘Two people, four phones! We looked at each other and thought there was an easy solution to the problem, a keyboard for the iPhone. ‘That’s when we decided to take matters into our own hands and the Typo Keyboard was born.’ However, it is not the first keyboard adapter for touchscreen devices. BoxWave produces cases that have keyboards that slide from the bottom of iPhones and other touchscreen devices. The OEM Slider board is similar, but slides from the side of the handset, whereas the Concord Keystone Swivel board has a keyboard built into a flip case.



How It Works
Although the keyboard slides onto the bottom of the phone, it actually connects to the software via Bluetooth. When a user wants to write a message, email or Facebook post, for example, they can type on the physical keyboard and the key strokes will be sent wirelessly to the phone in real-time.

The case adds a quarter of an inch thickness to the bottom of the Apple handset, and around an inch to the length.





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