> > it'll be great on touch-screens, but business and home users are not
> > going to be using touch for meat-and-potatoes computer usage.
> > --
>------------------------
>
>Over time your statement will no longer be correct.
>
>In that we will get better at design of UI than the morph from the old
>green screen to what we have currently.
>
>Sure we will need input devices, but I think that they will change as
>well.  The lock of the typewriter type of device might break within
>the next ten years.
>
>Today you could Blue tooth to another device, maybe in the very near
>future you could use your phone's keypad instead?  What if you were at
>a display at say a trade show.  You walk up and touch it to get to the
>input UI and your phone was the keyboard.
>
>With that in mind I think that Google and M$ are really pushing
>forward with the single OS that works in the tablet as well as the
>personal computer (phone, tablet, laptop, desktop)

Tiny keyboards suck for productivity. So do keyboards that don't provide 
tactile feedback that lets you know what keys you're on. And such devices 
also suck for blind users.

These designers keep forgetting that there are millions of people in back 
offices typing stuff into computers all day long, and the majority of 
computers are used by them, not people at trade shows or traveling 
salespeople or whatever.

Ken Dibble
www.stic-cil.org


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