this post was submitted on 31 May 2024
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What is it about the text messages and emails sent by older people that make me feel like I'm having a stroke?

Maybe they're used to various shortcuts in their writing that they picked up before autocorrect became common, but these habits are too idiosyncratic for autocorrect to handle properly. However, that doesn't explain the emails I've had to decipher that were typed on desktop keyboards. Has anyone else younger than 45 or so felt similarly frustrated with geriatrics' messages?

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[โ€“] retrieval4558@mander.xyz 16 points 3 months ago (6 children)

I used t9 in high school. In retrospect it's obviously unusably clunky, but I do miss being able to text totally blindly in my pocket or something.

[โ€“] stoy@lemmy.zip 5 points 3 months ago (4 children)

I tried using T9 from time to time, but it often sucked for me, probably because I needed to use it in Swedish and it wasn't that well developed for it.

[โ€“] LittleBorat2@lemmy.ml 5 points 3 months ago (3 children)

T9 was so bad that I don't even understand that they threw these phones on the market.

I was there for the whole GSM phone era and the most obvious thing would have been to release a blackberry type thing with a slide out keyboard.

[โ€“] tehmics@lemmy.world 5 points 3 months ago (1 children)

T9 just adapted the earlier lettering that phones already had on the numbers. '1-800-COL-LECT' Never intended you to type it as '1-800-222666555-555332228', you'd just dial 1-800-265-5328. but that's what you'd have to do to write it with T9.

[โ€“] stoy@lemmy.zip 2 points 3 months ago

Well, that is not all it did, it had a dictionary to do predictive text, and the Swedish one was never really good.

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