There will always be those that try concepts in places they have never been used. But touchscreens have been around for a long time and a lot is known about them. The all time great defining application for them is in restaurants for wait staff to enter your food selection.
Repetitive operations using touchscreens require physical use research which includes designing a mounting scheme that does not produce physical strain under normal operation. Normal accuracy of touch point taps has to be accommodated in screen apps. Large tap points that appear and vanish with an appropriate logic produce the great workplace improvements. E.g. the wait staff screens. The stuff behind successful touchscreen apps is mind boggling, often involving years even now decades of incremental research and program changes. This touchscreen editor I'm using right now on my smartphone is one such. Any one of the list of must-do's ignored and the app is likely doomed. Touchscreen radio? Not wishing anyone bad luck but they've bitten off quite a piece of work. Radio ops are very repetitive in contests. You'll never sell me a pure touch radio for contesting. Maybe a talky with the form factor of my iPhone 6+ with a Bluetooth linked manual control and separate Bluetooth linked amp/transmitter. The obvious (to me anyway) touch interface is to use a smart phone app that can also run on a tablet. Most people have already bought it and will replace it when it breaks for dozens of unrelated needs. Don't have to embed that cost and development into the radio. Let me use my house wifi or Bluetooth to link to my K3. The K3 change is to provide the interface. An internal board that listens to wifi and Bluetooth. All single chip stuff these days. Will be interesting to see what survives of touchscreen radio when the latest and greatest crowd has lost interest and moved on. 73, Guy K2AV On Friday, September 4, 2015, Bill Stravinsky via Elecraft < [email protected] <javascript:_e(%7B%7D,'cvml','[email protected]');>> wrote: > Not sure why I needed to know about an Icom 7300 and am guessing it has a > touchscreen. Leave the touchscreens > to the smart phones, IMHO. If I had a smartphone I wouldn't have a > problem with its touchscreen. I have 3 laptops and have mice for all of > them, can't stand touchpads either. Radios should have knobs, buttons, and > switches. > I feel confident that Elecraft wouldn't go there. Let Icom and whomever > else make a radio with a touch screen. > 73Bill K3WJV > ______________________________________________________________ > Elecraft mailing list > Home: http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft > Help: http://mailman.qth.net/mmfaq.htm > Post: mailto:[email protected] > > This list hosted by: http://www.qsl.net > Please help support this email list: http://www.qsl.net/donate.html > Message delivered to [email protected] -- Sent via Gmail Mobile on my iPhone ______________________________________________________________ Elecraft mailing list Home: http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft Help: http://mailman.qth.net/mmfaq.htm Post: mailto:[email protected] This list hosted by: http://www.qsl.net Please help support this email list: http://www.qsl.net/donate.html Message delivered to [email protected]

