Rick Bruiser
New member
I compose one or two emails on my N80 every day, each on the order of 200 words, which is the approximate length of this post. I've developed some proficiency at this, taking advantage of the Nokia's good T9 feature - but still it's a slow, tedious process. So I thought I'd look at a phone with a full set of keys.
Any QWERTY phone I'd use must be small and light, no larger than my N80. I also want 3G. The only unit that fills the bill is the Samsung Blackjack, which I tested today. I found typing on this unit to be very awkward, with its tiny keys and their unfamiliar arrangement. QWERTY makes no sense when you're using your thumb instead of ten fingers, and I don't know why the layout isn't in straight alphabetical order. The thumb has to be moved over greater distances, even on this small phone, than on the traditional 12-key pad.
At any rate, assuming familiarity with the keypad and one-hand operation, I'd like anyone's opinion on how great is the benefit of a full keyboard? Does it shorten your time by half, more than that, or not much at all?
Any QWERTY phone I'd use must be small and light, no larger than my N80. I also want 3G. The only unit that fills the bill is the Samsung Blackjack, which I tested today. I found typing on this unit to be very awkward, with its tiny keys and their unfamiliar arrangement. QWERTY makes no sense when you're using your thumb instead of ten fingers, and I don't know why the layout isn't in straight alphabetical order. The thumb has to be moved over greater distances, even on this small phone, than on the traditional 12-key pad.
At any rate, assuming familiarity with the keypad and one-hand operation, I'd like anyone's opinion on how great is the benefit of a full keyboard? Does it shorten your time by half, more than that, or not much at all?