At the Google I/O 2012 conference, one of the touted new features of Android 4.1 Jelly Bean was the enhanced predictive keyboard. After a couple weeks of using 4.1 on my Galaxy Nexus, I've just about had it with the predictive text input. Although some seem to clamor for the feature with third-party keyboards like Swiftkey, I feel much faster at regular touch-typing. One of my biggest reasons for wanting to revert to the old keyboard style was to bring back the row of common punctuations at the top of the keyboard when hitting space after a word. Diving into the settings, I found the remedy.
Simply go into Settings > Language & input > Android keyboard settings > Advanced settings > and uncheck "Next word prediction"
Now, instead of seeing predictive text entries at the top of the keyboard, you'll get simple spelling corrections and then punctuation when hitting the space bar between words. Back to normal!
Simply go into Settings > Language & input > Android keyboard settings > Advanced settings > and uncheck "Next word prediction"
Now, instead of seeing predictive text entries at the top of the keyboard, you'll get simple spelling corrections and then punctuation when hitting the space bar between words. Back to normal!