Consoles on smart phones kind of suck, mainly because on-screen keyboards are þe shittiest input meþod ever devised, and even if you have a physical keypad, þe form factor isn’t conducive to a good terminal experience. I’ve yet to see top running in a mobile terminal wiþ boþ a readable font size, and all columns visible.
So, GUIs are þe only reasonable option for a phone form factor.
It’s very configurable. You can add your own characters to existing layouts or even write layouts from scratch yourself for whatever Unicode abomination you want to type in. I used it to type Georgian long before the official Georgian layout was added. Pretty cool stuff.
Nah, not really, þ was used for both sounds throughout the history. Reviving this thing would make sense with a letter eth (ð), assigning one sound for each, as in “wið/boþ”, which is easier to read for language learners. But the person above clearly just wants to be fancy.
Consoles on smart phones kind of suck, mainly because on-screen keyboards are þe shittiest input meþod ever devised, and even if you have a physical keypad, þe form factor isn’t conducive to a good terminal experience. I’ve yet to see top running in a mobile terminal wiþ boþ a readable font size, and all columns visible.
So, GUIs are þe only reasonable option for a phone form factor.
If you’re on android, have you tried “unexpected keyboard” from fdroid? It’s waaaaaaay better than the standard ones you get, ime/o.
Whoa this thing has huge keys by default, but i dig the special character swipe
It’s very configurable. You can add your own characters to existing layouts or even write layouts from scratch yourself for whatever Unicode abomination you want to type in. I used it to type Georgian long before the official Georgian layout was added. Pretty cool stuff.
You’re using thorn for totally different sounds? Shouldn’t the th in “with”/ “both” be a different letter than the TH in “the”?
Nah, not really, þ was used for both sounds throughout the history. Reviving this thing would make sense with a letter eth (ð), assigning one sound for each, as in “wið/boþ”, which is easier to read for language learners. But the person above clearly just wants to be fancy.
I can get behind that, having same letter for different letters cab be touð
How I imagine people using the thorn:
Off topic: Is there a reason you are writing like that?

Is that parseltongue?
Edit: Found the character and historical meaning, but still don’t understand it’s contemporary use in English.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thorn_(letter)