Goodbye, numeric mobile phone keypads. You're going the way of the rotary
dial. Touch screens and QWERTY keyboards will take over from here, thank
you.

At North America's largest cell phone trade show, running this week in Las
Vegas, there were few new phones for the US market that had a numerical
keypad instead of an alphabetic keyboard. Touch screens also were out in
force.

These changes are a recognition of the popularity of text messaging and
wireless internet use. Industry organization CTIA Wireless, which hosts the
show, said US subscribers sent 1 trillion text messages last year, three
times the 2007 volume. Meanwhile, the same people used 2.2 trillion minutes
of voice calls, an increase of less than 5 per cent.

This shift in how people use their mobile devices has overturned mobile
phone design. According to NPD Group, 31 per cent of phones sold in US
stores in the fourth quarter of 2008 had full-alphabet keyboards, up from 5
per cent two years earlier.

AT&T, the second-largest US carrier after Verizon Wireless, introduced six
phones this week, all of which had either a touch screen, a typewriter-style
keyboard, or both. At the booth of Samsung Electronics, the largest seller
of phones in the US, there were no new keypad phones.

Motorola, the largest domestic maker of phones, was showing off one low-end
handset with a keypad. It went on sale through AT&T two weeks ago. But
Motorola's big news was a model called the Evoke, which has a touch screen.
It's designed for the U.S. market, though it doesn't have a carrier
distribution agreement yet.

LG Electronics displayed a new handset, the GD900, that seemed to both
emphasise a numeric keypad and make it vanish. A pad slides out from the
GD900's body, but it's made of transparent plastic, so you can see right
through it. You don't need to use keypad at all, since the screen is
touch-sensitive. Other new LG phones were also dominated by touch screens.

Even at the low end of the market, keyboards for text messaging are becoming
common and affordable. AT&T expects to sell two of the keyboard-equipped
phones it introduced, the Samsung Magnet and LG Neon, for about $US20 to
$US30.

Old-fashioned numeric keypads still will have a prominent place - but
largely overseas. In a twist of market dynamics, the demand for QWERTY
phones is mainly a North American phenomenon, said Ross Rubin, an analyst at
NPD.

Although touch screens are gaining in popularity all over the world, people
in other countries got into text messaging much earlier and "became
acclimated to texting with a keypad," Rubin said. Meanwhile, the U.S. market
has been influenced by high-end smart phones like the Treo and the
BlackBerry that pioneered small versions of typewriter-style keyboards.

As a result, numeric keypads were still dominant at the CTIA booth of Nokia,
the world's largest maker of mobile phones, which has a relatively minor
presence in the U.S. The same was the case at the booth of Japanese-Swedish
manufacturer Sony Ericsson.

Notice there is No mention of accessible phones  for us blind users here.

 



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