Battle of the input methods: Touch, type or tell? [poll]

Vote for your preferred input method on a mobile phone in our poll

Published by Boc Ly on August 2, 2012

Nokia E55

We’ve come a long way since our early descendants scribbled some crude animal drawings on their cave walls over 30,000 years ago.

What would these inhabitants of the Stone Age have made of a quill, or a ballpoint pen? A typewriter, surely, would have frazzled their primitive minds.

However, for many of us, the pen and pencil have become anachronistic tools as well. I can’t remember the last time I needed a pencil, and the pen has become an implement of last resort. 

Most often, of course, I am typing on my computer and increasingly my smartphone. Even for jotting down reminders and shopping lists, I use a simple Notes app. It is more convenient than pen and paper and I know I won’t lose it.

Even as the mobile phone becomes the dominant device for how we capture, store and pass on information, another battle is raging about the way we are doing it.

So, it’s time declare your loyalties in the war of the input methods.

Number keypads

Nokia Asha 202

What does the following sequence of digits mean to you? 4, 3, 5, 5 and 6.

If you have a number keypad on your phone, then you’ve probably noticed that it spells out ‘hello’ in predictive text.

Mastering predictive text (aka T-9) should be a rite of passage for every young (or old!) person getting to grips with their first mobile phone.

Once you’ve got it figured out, it becomes second nature and long messages can flow from your fingertips with astonishing speed.

You cannot deny the simple elegance and functionality of a number keypad. 

Example phones: Nokia Asha 202 and Nokia Asha 203

Qwerty keyboard

Nokia Asha 303

Despite the brilliance of predictive text, the Qwerty keyboard is the input method that we are most familiar with.

Their appearance on our mobile phones heralded the age when they suddenly become an extension of our computers.

Much like the number keypads, there is the satisfying haptic feedback you get from using a keyboard with proper buttons. Somehow, it still feels like a mechanical process.

Plus, I would hazard a guess that you are less likely to make as many typing mistakes with a Qwerty keyboard than on a touchscreen device.

Example phones: Nokia Asha 302 and Nokia Asha 303  

Touchscreen

Nokia Asha 311

The touchscreen is fantastic for looking at photos, browsing the web and watching video, but is it really that good for typing?

Yes, touchscreen phones use a digital Qwerty keyboard as well but it is still a very different experience from pressing real buttons.

How often have you tapped the wrong letter? How frustrating is it when you are trying to type on a bumpy bus or car journey?

Despite the drawbacks though, touchscreens are very much in the ascendancy. Is it a case of their advantages outweighing the disadvantages?

Example phones: Nokia Asha 311 and Nokia 808 PureView

Voice 

Currently, with the best will in the world, getting a device to obey voice commands can still be a hit and miss affair. We are still a long way off from a mobile phone passing the Turing test.

Nokia Lumia 800

Plus, there is still the embarrassment factor, especially in public, of talking to an inanimate object. All that said, hands free communication has clear benefits and there are situations, such as driving, when it is a necessity.

Voice is perhaps an input method that will become more and more important in the future, especially as the technology gets more advanced.

Take a look at this post about how you can use simple voice commands on your Nokia Lumia smartphone.

Example phones: Nokia Lumia 800 and Nokia Lumia 900

Don’t forget to vote in our poll and let us know which one you prefer.

image creditDavidRGilson

Comments

  • http://twitter.com/bluechrism Chris Martin

    Here’s hoping for a WP8 phone with better landscape support and E7 style QWERTY in the future – a much better form factor for QWERTY than either the the E6 or Dell Venue Pro style QWERTY.

    Only problem is, I don’t get the feeling there is much desire in MS to make Windows Phone 8 work well in both landscape and portrait orientations (I will hope however, the landscape onscreen keyboard can be redesigned to not use close to 75% of the screen).

  • Benoît HERVIER

    I believe in a phone that can write what i think …

  • Yogesh Srinath

    Please add an option of Swype.. Even though it uses a touchscreen qwerty keyboard, the way it is handled is so different and intuitive that it deserves a separate option.

  • xkiko

    Winner is touchscreen, just view sales of Android and Ios devices. Lumia is not a phone that people admire, so try to update more symbian ecosystem

  • http://twitter.com/Noelinho Noelinho

    I definitely prefer the QWERTY keyboard, by a country mile. You can’t beat it for accuracy or response. If you’d release a combination of the Lumia 900, with Windows Phone 8, and Pureview, with a QWERTY keybaord, I’d a) love you and b) buy it immediately.

  • http://twitter.com/AndreasJankeEU Andreas Janke

    It depends on the situation. Sometimes, I’d prefer to talk to my phone, sometimes especially when I’m in the city I’d like touch most. A keypad is obsolete for me.

  • http://twitter.com/NokiaKnowings Kevin Everett

    I was never really a fan of Talking to my phone until it’s 100% I will type on phone thanks.  By the time my Lumia reads my message back to me and I correct it I could have typed and sent it already.

  • Vocabulary

    I always thought they were my ancestors, not my descendants.  Is this what we are going to become?  “We’ve come a long way since our early descendants scribbled some crude animal drawings on their cave walls over 30,000 years ago”

  • http://twitter.com/Alvetica Al Pavangkanan

    I loved the qwerty keyboard on the E7

  • steelicon

    Nokia Belle FP1 and S60 has a darn good offline voice recognition feature. Improve on that and we can really go places, figuratively and literally. The other OS are just playing catch up on this technology since 2006 and now they are at the heels of NOKIA. Wake up, NOKIA!

  • Elokuu

    There probably wont be a single “favourite” way, but would depend on the situation the user is in at that particular point in time.

    With hand-input, I think *the* main requirement is the user should be able to type almost anything with one hand (T9 keypad and Swype are the only two that can do that properly).

    As for voice – I have been impressed with the mostly excellent Voice recognition on WP7 (great when I am driving) – but current
    implementation is not handling “name not found” error properly.
    (need to go to touchscreen and tap “ok” button for the voice
    recognition to start again)

    This is my first comment to this blog – why cant I login with my Nokia account?

  • gadgety

    I love voice dial and voice commands, when they work. Voice dial on Windows Phone requires activating the device with touch first, afaik. Self-defeating procedure. As for touch screen input, Swype makes it easier. I prefer landscape mode in general. For a business device qwerty keyboard does help things. So to answer the poll, my answer is I like options in input method.

  • chris_t610

    I think as phones evolve, we are also following suit. During the height of Symbian and text messaging, T9 (numeric keypad) was the way to do it and if memory serves me right, none of the qwerty-running windows phone can out match T9.

    Qwerty became the king of the hill when emails landed on mobile phones, making typing lengthy messages a breeze.

    Nobody wanted to tap-type on touchscreens until the introduction of capacitive touch input popularized by the iPhone.

    But however the changes, I am not looking back to T9, thank you. :-)

    • boc_ly

      Good point, Chris, that we are following suit as the phones evolve. But will devices ever evolve enough so that we can ‘speak’ to them? It’ll be interesting.

  • http://twitter.com/wynandvs Wynand van Staden

    For touch devices, I find alphanumeric keypads like I had on my 5800 the quickest and most precise way to type. Pity my N9 only has QWERTY.

  • http://twitter.com/thehotiron Mike Maddaloni

    I’m now on my 3rd Nokia QWERTY – the E7 – following the E72 and the E70.  Before that I used the Palm 600 and 680.  For myself, a physical keyboard is much easier for faster typing and accuracy.  I have tried to use the on-screen keyboard in Nokia Belle but my fat fingers still mistype too much!

    I am looking forward to seeing how a physical QWERTY is worked into the WP8 models!

    mp/m

  • http://twitter.com/jGRite GhaV jGRite

    Qwerty Keyboard also means, a bluetooth or usb connected keyboard OR via Nokia Suite on the computer (for text messaging and such).

  • AlfonsoXIV

    I don’t like the title of this poll (Battle of the input methods: Touch, type or tell?). There is no need for a battle. Please equip the next Nokia phones with most or all of those features. And then, in due time, please give this title to the next poll about the input methods: “Which input methods of Nokia phones do you prefer?”.

    I don’t like the topmost picture either. It displays a special 20-key keyboard which works only with heavy text–prediction and has not muvch to do with proper Qwerty keyboards. Using that picture only confuses the poll, because the features of that 20-key keyboard are closer to 12-key keypads than a Qwerty keyboard.
     
    “Qwerty keyboard” and “Touch screen” do not exclude each other. A touch phone can include a virtual Qwerty keyboard and a hardware Qwerty keyboard (the latter with “physical keys”), like Nokia N900, N950 and E7 have. And a touch-screen phone or a phone with physical Qwerty keyboard can naturally be equipped with voice command (for simple operations in phonebook), or even with the “text input with voice”.

    Next time please use more exact alternatives which the voters can understand. Here is my suggestion:
    “Tick one or more of these features (those which you use of would desire to use):
    * Qwerty keyboard (with physical keys), sliding from the long edge
    * Qwerty keyboard (with physical keys), fixed below the screen
    * Virtual Qwerty keyboard, on touchscreen when in landscape orientation
    * Virtual Qwerty keyboard, on touchscreen when in portrait orientation
    * Hardware number keypad (with 12 physical keys, used in portrait orientation)
    * Virtual number keypad (with 12 virtual keys in portrait orientation)
    Moreover, choose one of more of these features:
    * Text input without text prediction
    * Text input with text prediction
    * Text input with voice (for messages etc)
    * Voice control (for voice dialing etc)

    • Vamien

      it’s a simple poll, how can this confuses anyone? And you don’t like the top picture, really dude? Everything you said here is completely ridiculous.

  • bloggingpig

    T9/Numerical keypad is a MUST!
       Qwerty keyboards are almost like on-screen, virtual keyboards nowadays, and Swype really makes Qwerty almost obsolete.

    HOWEVER, only Numerical Keypads do when I want to TEXT BLIND!

  • maximilian_felix_fischer

    I’d really love to have a phone with a QWERTY slide-out keyboard and decent specs available in europe. Something like the Motorola Droid 4, just with a removable battery and as I said: available in europe.

    If you do this, Nokia, I will totally buy it!

  • Henrik Hjerppe

    Voted QWERTY on my Lumia, but switched to desktop to leave a comment. I wish I had some choice in the matter, but regrettably 1) No physical QWERTY on Lumia, 2) Can’t even hook up a Bluetooth keyboard, 3) Autocorrect is nice in English, but quite useless in Finnish, 4) Voice is not available here in Finland, not even in English…

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_KIEAHRYYECRI7SLP7GZI6LI7TQ IA

    Touch or type, it doesn’t matter.

    As long as a Nokia phone is not loaded with Windows, it has a good chance of having my money.

    Please get a clue already. Very few people want a Windows phone; a Nokia brand will not change this fact.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=524488706 Karl Knoflach

    Lets hope Nokia learns something from that survey and will launch some high end phones with QUERTY keyboards. There has not been even one decend new QUERTY keybord phone in Europe in almost two years. Thats why I am using a 3 year old phone now….

  • datengecloud

    I prefer a combination of touchscreen and querty-keyboard. Example: E7
    or a combination of number keypad and querty-keyboard
    Example: E75

  • cramchick

    It is a shame that Nokia has not yet delievered a WP phone with physical keyboard. This is the main reason why I have not yet bought one.
    It kinda shows that Nokia has no idea what their customers really want

  • Luke_Mertel

    I hope Nokia learns from this survey. Although I have regular access to a Lumia 800 I am still hoping for a full qwerty keyboard phone. Hard to understand why Nokia has so many different qwerty keyboard phone models out there but none for Windows Phone, the platform Nokia has put its future on. My personal phone is still some old one with physical keyboard and it badly need to be replaced. But there is no Windows Phone substitute from Nokia. There is not even a hint if it is in the works. So there goes another Christmas shopping period without one. Obviously with Nokia not offering a hardware keyboard solution for their E7, N950 etc customers they want to drive them away to Nokia competitors which is a sad move. Simply put: if Nokia does not release a Windows Phone slider any other Windows Phone touch only device will be an option as replacement for my E7 even a Htc or else. However if they release an E7 Windows Phone successor, I would certainly stick to Nokia. If a competitor will release a comparable phone with hardware keyboard before Nokia does, I am gone.

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Teresa-Tannahill/537832014 Teresa Tannahill

    I’m 45 years old. I’m not ancient. Or senile. I don’t like QWERTY keyboards. And I don’t like touchscreens.

    I prefer to use a 0-9 phone keypad for data input.

    I can keep one hand warm in my pocket, eat a sandwich, walk a dog on a lead AND use my phone at the same time. I can send texts from my pocket when my boss isn’t looking. I can spell correctly. And I can use the phone in freezing conditions.

    I hate having to decipher garbage texts from touchscreen phones. They’ve made people lazy.

    I chose a Nokia N95 because I need all the features of a smartphone, including GPS, internet and camera.

    Now it’s dead.

    I want to buy a Nokia. However, your latest range of phones doesn’t offer a smartphone with a keypad. All your keypad phones are dumbed down.

    I want a 0-9 keypad.

    I WANT something like a Nokia N96.

    Why aren’t Nokia catering for people like me? We’re 10% of the poll. Don’t we deserve a smartphone too?

  • takeos

    It would be nice if Nokia and others realized that different people have different needs, and to some people a good keyboard is important, like to some people dual SIM support is important. I personally wouldn’t buy a device without a horizontal QWERTY, with numeric row, keys like apostrophe, etc. (Something like on the good old Nokia 9300i.)

  • http://twitter.com/Kas_Can_Fly Kas Sedai

    I’ve heard that manufacturers saying there is no demand for landscape qwerty phones in the UK. Well, in my search for one in the past few weeks I can say that is entirely untrue. People walk into a phone shop and usually end up being persuaded to get a phone there and then, some go away and do it online. Both of these sorts of people have complained at the lack of availability of any landscape qwerty phones (the only two in sale in the UK are 2010 models; the xperia x10 mini pro and the xperia pro, both incredibly outdated, I have also found two or three places still selling their remaining stock of E7). People with the know how and who are willing to take the risk are importing qwerty phones and hacking them. This is a market that is desperate for qwerty, for something different, a variation in the market. Ok, not every new phone released needs to have a qwerty keyboard, but can’t just one? If nokia don’t do something different they’re going to get swept away with the tide once again, please nokia release a qwerty keyboard phone for your lost fans, old fans, the new fans you would get, and qwerty fans everywhere!

  • http://www.facebook.com/lennart.spengler Lennart Spengler

    Like “Noelinho”….I would buy such a smartphone imediatelly, too..
    I hope Nokia will soon release a phone with this features (qwerty keyboard…..)
    I like this Nokia phones “for generations”…E7, N97….. and had all…..I hope the next generation (of this “great family”….) will follow soon……

  • Soemen

    Even if Nokia would release such a qwerty slider phone my fear is that they screw the specs. Looking at the current Lumia lineup the 920 has ugly shiny plastic, is too big and is not available with the most required colors and no sd card slot. On the other hand the 820 still is to big, does not have the best camera and does not have image stabilisation.
    So it is easy to see that a qwerty slider phone made by Nokia would be full of compromises instead of doing a real high end phone packed with everything available out there. It should have: SD card slot, dual sim, gorilla glove ready glass, it should not exceed the E7 in size, NFC, backlit keyboard, water proofed, wireless charging, available in many colores (at least colored covers, most important is cyan). Only premium users require a hardware keyboard instead of a kiddie touch screen phone. So this has to be a premium phone. Otherwise it is prone to be a disaster.

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  • http://twitter.com/NowEating Now Eating

    I’ve been using Nokia since 2000 (except for the Erickson T610). Had 6210, N95, E71, E55, E6. I don’t like the E6 (freezes sometimes when trying to answer a call). I preferred the E55 but the keys stopped working (what happened to Nokia build quality?) Looks like it will be my last Nokia. I want a high end phone WITH BUTTONS (qwerty or numeric) a good camera, excellent reception & battery life. Make that and I will pay top dollar for it. I’m a business user. If I want to surf the web I’ll use a PC or a tablet. Please make an updated version of the E71