jducoeur: (Default)
jducoeur ([personal profile] jducoeur) wrote2007-11-16 11:35 am
Entry tags:

SMS Poll

Okay, here's an odd-sounding question for all those of you who use SMS, aka text messaging from your phone -- specifically, those who have ordinary cell phones with normal number pads, not full keyboards. (Those of us with Treos are assumed to not be the usual case.)

We're trying to come up with a concise and easy-to-type SMS syntax -- which means I need to check out what's actually easy to type. So I'd like to know what's under your buttons. If you could take a minute or two to look at your phone and answer this, I'd appreciate it.

I think of the "common" mobile-phone letter layout as being:
  • 2: abc

  • 3: def

  • 4: ghi

  • 5: jkl

  • 6: mno

  • 7: pqrs

  • 8: tuv

  • 9: wxyz


[Poll #1089759]
ext_44932: (Default)

[identity profile] baavgai.livejournal.com 2007-11-17 03:42 am (UTC)(link)
Just a side thought. I always thought if I could have an alternate entry method to the semi standard keyboard described, I'd me much happier.

What if only 1 2 and 3 worked? I could easily hover my thumb over three buttons without looking. My starter options are something like

1:A-I, 2:J-R, 3:S-" "

I choose 2 and get another menu
1:J-L, 2:M-O, 3:P-R

I choose 2 again and get
1:M, 2:N, 3:O

And 1 get me an M.

Every letter and a space are just three clicks of three keys away. (3^3).

Sure, it looks kind of complex, but it's no more of a learning curve for me than trying to always figure out the little letters under the little numbers.
ext_44932: (Default)

[identity profile] baavgai.livejournal.com 2007-11-17 04:39 pm (UTC)(link)
Yes, it's all thumb movement, just locked into the span of three buttons and the same horizontal line. The movement itself is relatively low stress, particularly compared to all the other movement involved in changing vertical orientation. In the layout I described, any letter will always involve three presses. It would never be few presses, just less movement. Out of curiosity, I worried out what a message would take.

The message "phone type
" in the traditional "7-44-666-66-33-00-8-999-7-33
" and the three press "231-132-223-222-122-333-312-331-231-122
". Yep, it's longer, but look at all the up down on the traditional. Makes my carpometacarpal joint itchy just looking at all those vertical transitions in the standard method.

Just thought to would amuse and might help with what you were thinking. Only half serious, though if such an option were on my phone I'd definitely give it a go.