I agree with Johnny when he says resistive sucks. Well, anybody would agree, but what I'm really agreeing with is that the N97 should have had capacitive. Their excuse about Asia needing it is not a good argument...
I've used phones in HongKong before, and there are other ways to input Chinese characters. For example, how do you think I can do this on my laptop without a resistive screen? 你好,我是中国人。 Also, how do all the hundreds of thousands of people who don't have a touch screen AT ALL input their Chinese characters?
It's called pin-yin, which is a very simple way to enter Chinese; the software just converts the pin-yin into Chinese characters. This system is taught in China, so everyone knows it (well, at least those who went to school). Mind you, if you didn't go to school, you probably wouldn't own an N97 in China.
In HongKong, where pin-yin can't be used (pin-yin only works for Mandarin Chinese speakers) you have input using strokes. I don't know if any of you know what I'm talking about, but you can write any Chinese character just by using five different "strokes" in the correct order.
In Taiwan, you have the "BPMF" system, which is the phonetic system that is similar to the latin alphabet; a symbol to represent each sound. This has been used on keypads for a LONG time, there are enough keys to support this system on both qwerty and on alpha-numeric.
Korea's Hangul system can be adapted for keypad. I don't know anything about Japanese input, but I imagine it is very efficient already since their phones are crazy cool.
All of these input systems can be implemented on a capacitive screen in the same way that we utilize T9 currently on S60v5; there really is no reason to keep resistive anymore.
Sorry for the long post.