Typo Keyboard review: mistakes were made
Getting the Typo set up and connected is impossibly easy. The two halves of the thin, matte black plastic case slide easily onto your iPhone 5 or 5S and connect firmly and simply in the middle. Press and hold the Bluetooth button until a blinking blue light appears, then open Bluetooth settings on your phone and select Typo Keyboard. It pairs almost instantly — I was ready to go in six seconds.
Setup is easy — nothing else is


That’s where the list of good things about the Typo ends. The rest of my experience has been a poisonous mix of mistakes and missed opportunities, leaving me waiting with bated breath for the moment I could tear the case off my iPhone and go back to the way things should be. Using the Typo for a week killed my battery, because the slightest brush of a key is enough to make the iPhone’s screen blink on. The case also blocks my phone’s Home button, and I guess I like TouchID more than I thought.
But the only thing that really matters is that the Typo isn’t a good keyboard. Its four rows of backlit, angled, slightly raised black keys with white letters and borders may look suspiciously (and perhaps illegally) like they were lifted from a BlackBerry, but there’s no confusing the two. The Typo’s keys wobble in place, and have too much travel and a harsh, ugly bottoming-out feeling. The whole frame gives as you type, and the whole contraption feels like it’s about to snap, or like each key might stick. Period and comma are buried as secondary keys — along with numbers and symbols — so I have to hit Alt+M every time I end a sentence. Long-pressing a key just capitalizes it, another function that seems less useful than the secondary character.
It may look like a BlackBerry keyboard, but there's no confusing the twoI am, I’ve found, slightly faster on the Typo than I am on my iPhone’s touchscreen, and I can type somewhat effectively without looking. But I’m a lot better at both on a BlackBerry, and I don’t use one of those either.
The Typo feels like a cheap knockoff of a BlackBerry keyboard, like someone thought all that mattered was the shape of the keys and the font styling. And it only half-scratches the BlackBerry itch, too: the BlackBerry devices most people remember had a trackball or trackpad above the keyboard, meaning you didn’t actually need to touch the screen to use the device, and there were keyboard shortcuts galore. Those, as much as simple typing speed, were what made a BlackBerry fast to use. The Typo, which makes my iPhone longer, heavier, and awkwardly top-heavy, forced me to constantly shift between keyboard and screen: tap in the text box, type, shift the phone in my hands so I can reach the send button, hunt for the Home key, scroll on the screen, contort back to type in the browser.
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