The United States
Patent and Trademark ****** recently
published a new
Patent application originally filed by
Apple last July, detailing a system in which the receiver of an iMessage could be **tified when pieces of the message are scrambled incoherently by the company's
Autocorrect system (via
AppleInsider). The
Patent isn't a proactive solution to enhance the sometimes spotty nature of autocorrect, but simply a way to let the person on the other end of the text k**w what's happening, and give each user tools to better explain what they meant.
Apple describes a new user interface that would highlight any words or phrases in a message that have been siphoned through autocorrect. The system wouldn't be advanced e**ugh to reveal the specifically intentioned words the sender meant, but at least give the receiver a heads up about which parts of the text were corrected.
A design of the sender-side UI
Parts of the
Patent reveal iterations of the idea that can
Streamline the
Clarification process, as well. For example, a description of the sender-side user interface includes a prompt that pops up -- after a user taps on the autocorrected word -- with an option to "Send clarification" to the receiver. The canned message fills out the phrase, "I sent [wrong word], but I meant [correct word]." If they want a complete do-over, the user could also just opt to re-send the entire message.
A design of the receiver-side UI
On the receiver-side user interface, if the sender isn't opting to fix the issue themselves, the other person can "Request clarification" by tapping on the highlighted
Autocorrect word or phrase. The automated message is similar to the previous sender-side phrase, asking "You sent [wrong word]. What did you mean?"
If implemented in a future version of iOS, the
Autocorrect highlight
Patent could be similar to the way iOS currently underscores vague references to dates and times when users send and receive text messages. Apple's new
Patent could be slightly more helpful for most users than that feature, however, especially given the speed with which iPhone users have grown accustomed to texting on the device, and how frustrating it can be to realize
Autocorrect interfered with your message.
Like most patents, it's still advised to be wary of how long it'll take
Apple to implement the
Autocorrect **tification system into iOS, if it ever will. Still, it's easy to see how useful and streamlined such a feature could be, without completely taking out much of the humorous -- and sometimes
Awkward -- mishaps for which
Autocorrect has become famous.
Tag:
Patent
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