Quote:
Originally Posted by JSanders
There's your clue!
|
This thread is hilarious, but very informative.
some hilarious and yet very sensitive are
Buck Nick (sorry dude I thought both words were one that show up and was wondering what name you have. 2nd though was adding ed to the end bucked, nicked; then did a double take and realized your name is Nick. Once again funny but sensitive so I'm truely sorry).
Dag - first time I've ever heard that name. Man you seriously need to edit your word list. I'd would NOT want be in your shoes' when the mistake happens on a high priority corporate email with several ppl's names in the CC field and all are upper echlon group. Did the edit work? Think of it this way. if you ever leave that job and you send that email and CC many others, they'll never forget and even have a bathroom banter on it. Its not right, but funny. sensitive so sorry about my strange kiddish sense of humor. It keeps me from offing myself at the end of a stressful day & keeps me from giving up on my kids - even if my personal life with my girl seems to be in the toilet for months.
you might've guessed that I don't type corporate emails from my BB Pearl. And I wonder if this is why almost ALL corporations neglect on sourcing them to employees. Strange how SureType doesn't have a sentence pattern recognition into it or is this coming with Spell Check for the Suretype devices?? where "this guy from school" doesn't become "this hit from school" or "I just bought this wicked cool hat" doesn't become "I just bought this wicked cool ***". The latter may make sense with a different sort of words when in Britain or with British English selected. *** is common term for cigarette. So in a sentence like "can I have a ***" is completely socially acceptable and doesn't sound out of order, but to us here even when visiting London and first hearing it causes a surprise and funny expression on your face.
Is RIMM working on improving SureType on the new Pearl 2's ??
Personally I've adjusted to typing it out fully then deleting to the letters that thus far work and continue with the combination and it works. New words I trackball to corrections on the fly. It seems to pick up better this way - as THIS is the way its supposed to work, and its advised. Curious how many ppl getting the word choices are not following this procedure, only because I don't see this happening a lot, but again I'm not typing formal emails.