Latest version of SwiftKey comes with full iOS 14 support

Oct 1, 2020 21:05 GMT  ·  By

SwiftKey is currently one of the best mobile keyboard apps out there, and iPhone users simply love it. The living proof in this regard is nothing else than the number of reviews published in the App Store, so you can obviously see SwiftKey running on millions of iPhones out there.

And it happens for a good reason. Not only that SwiftKey comes with a truly advanced prediction and correction engine, but the app also packs support for an overwhelming number of languages.

And this week, Microsoft has somehow found 19 other languages that weren’t supported by SwiftKey, so the company released version 2.8.3 to provide prediction and correction support for these too.

The new languages that are supported by SwiftKey are the following: Belarusian, Bepo, Chechen, Colemak, Kabardian, Ossetian, Qwerty (Estonian), Qwertz (Albanian), Qwertz (Swiss French), Rapa Nui, Rusyn, Svorak (Swedish), Tajik, Tatar, Turkish (F), Twi, Venetian, Wakhi, and Yakut.

If you’ve never heard of some of them, that’s fine, neither do we, but for some reason, Microsoft decided to add support in SwiftKey just in case.

Full iOS 14 support

The very same SwiftKey version also comes with added compatibility for iOS 14, the latest operating system update that Apple released in September for the iPhone 6s and newer.

So if you already updated your iPhone to iOS 14, everything should work correctly now – though to be honest, I didn’t experience anything unusual with SwiftKey before the update on iOS 14 either, as the app was working just as expected even without this specific compatibility release.

Microsoft’s SwiftKey requires iOS 11 or later, so if you’re already running iOS 14, you’re just good to go. It’s the best keyboard app available right now on the iPhone, there’s no doubt about it, and you can find it in the App Store on this page.