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In terms of buttons, you’ll find a classic QWERTY offering with separate buttons for individual letters, along with a spacebar, backspace, return, Alt and Shift. Numbers and basic symbols, such as commas and colons, are integrated with these. In addition, you’ll see a bunch of slightly less familiar keys flanking the spacebar, all marked with fairly self-explanatory icons. These are: home, backlight and keyboard lock. A slight design flaw means that, from beneath, the circuitry and backlights are visible, but only when the case is empty.
The company recommends topping up the Typo 2’s 180mAh battery every 7-14 days. After charging the Typo 2 via the Micro USB port that sits on its left-hand side, setting up is easy. The case splits effortlessly into two pieces: the bottom section, which carries the actual keyboard, slides onto the lower portion of the iPhone 6, while the top section does the same to the phone’s upper half. Once interlocked, via two fairly flimsy tabs, the case fits snugly around the iPhone. At this point, several drawbacks are immediately obvious.
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First, where’s the iPhone 6’s home button gone? Yes, the keyboard covers the home button entirely, rendering Touch ID – one of the iPhone’s most prominent features – completely and utterly useless. The home button on the Typo 2 works as an ordinary home button should, and brings up Siri too, but lacks fingerprint technology, which is a major blow. Secondly, the case is excessively large and weighty.
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The Typo 2 sticks two fingers up at anyone who loves the iPhone 6 for its sleek frame. On its own, the phone measures 138.1 x 67 x 6.9mm and 129g. The Typo 2 adds about an inch to its height, making it just about small enough to fit into a standard jeans pocket. At its thickest point, the Typo 2 is about twice as fat as the iPhone 6 – the extra bulk is very, very noticeable.
What’s more, since the top of the keyboard sits right at the bottom edge of the iPhone screen, the bottom 3mm or so of the display is rather difficult to access with your digits. Loads of apps use this area of the screen as a dashboard of sorts, which makes this another rather big issue. The sides of the case are a touch too thick, too, so that the physical power and volume buttons are a little hard to get to, despite perfectly sized cutouts. Typo 2 – Typing Experience Pairing the Typo 2 with the smartphone via Bluetooth is quick and straightforward, and a handy user guide included in the packaging explains how to use the various buttons (or combinations) to maximum effect. Unfortunately, the Bluetooth connection puts a large strain on the actual phone’s battery, and we found power levels decreasing quickly.
Typing is typically quicker on a physical keyboard than on a digital one, and the Typo 2 keeps up the tradition. My fingers have a long history of being rather clumsy – learning to play a short excerpt of Camille Saint-Saëns’ Danse Macabre on the keyboard took weeks of practice at school – but the Typo 2 is easy to use. The spacebar is the only button on the Typo 2 that lies completely flat, with all others sticking out at a slight angle, making it easier for your fingers to distinguish individual keys. The odd typo aside, the dinky little buttons are easy to navigate and speedy to type with, and make a lovely little clicking sound when they’re pushed.
However, apparently not everyone is a fan of the noise, with one TrustedReviews member of staff likening it to lots of knuckles being simultaneously cracked. What isn’t so quick is the backspace function. Holding it down doesn’t speed up deletion, so you’ll have to be patient when erasing your errors.
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