Gameboy70
Member

Registered: Oct 1999
Location: Metro Station, Hollywood and Highland
Posts: 1018 |
I've always liked Graffiti, which was a godsend compared to my Newton 110's HWR, which never worked as advertised -- possibly because I'm left-handed. Bill Gates, another southpaw, had the same problem with the first WinCE prototypes to come out of MS' R&D, so they switched to miniature keyboards. When the Pilot critical massed with Graffiti, it was clear the the market found block character recognition more practical for PIMs.
Let's be clear about this: no one likes Graffiti, but unlike theoretically superior alternatives, most people can actually use it.
But Graffiti works best for short entries: names, phone numbers, addresses, lists, etc. For a 250-word email, my experience with the Blackberry is that thumb typing is better suited for the task. RIM hasn't been given enough credit for improving the design of small keyboards (which I usually hate) with tapered, non-contiguous keys. The early WinCE keyboard models were a pain to use, since they required some effort to avoid hitting neighboring keys.
Equally important is dialing. It's faster to dial the first two or three letters -- like "ste" to look up or call Stephanie -- than to use a stylus; and this can be done with one hand. The silkscreen means that cell phone users won't have physical keys to push when dialing a number. That's probably acceptable for PDA fans, but not normal cell phone users. Hawkins was probably more concerned with improving the numeric keypad interface than he was in improving the silkscreen interface.
So for messaging and dialing, the thumboard is the way to go with the Treo, but not necessarily the rest of Handspring's product line. I don't think we're witnessing the death of Graffiti.
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Last edited by Gameboy70 on 11-16-2001 at 05:49 AM
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