1. rollingrock1988's Avatar
    Yes, train stations are wonderful microcosms of mobile life - everyone's got their devices out, whether making a call, checking email, looking something up or simply finding entertainment. And I had time to spare, with almost an hour before my delayed train.

    The trick was being nosy enough to work out which models each person had without attracting attention! The tally of smartphones (i.e. I discounted any low end feature phones and multimedia devices like iPod Touches), after an hour, was:

    Blackberry Curve - 8
    Blackberry Bold 9700 series - 7
    Apple iPhone 4 - 7
    Apple iPhone 3G/3GS - 5
    HTC Desire - 4
    Samsung Galaxy S II - 4
    Nokia N8 - 2
    Nokia 5800 - 2
    Nokia N95 - 2
    Nokia E72 - 2
    Nokia N97 mini - 1
    Nokia E71 - 1
    Samsung Galaxy S - 1
    HTC Hero - 1
    Motorola Milestone Droid 2 - 1

    Now, this is obviously a very small sample in the wider scheme of things, and perhaps skewed a little to those with the income to travel and to devices which people had evolved as comfortable for travelling with, but I did want to draw out a few points of interest.

    Phones, phones, phones
    Scott Beale / Laughing Squid

    Of 48 smartphones spotted, ten were powered by Symbian OS, roughly in line with 20%-ish market share these days (though, as reported previously, dropping somewhat). 12 were iOS devices and 11 ran Android. A full fifteen ran Blackberry's OS, intriguingly. Overall though, a pretty fair spread of market share across four smartphone OS.

    [Also of incidental interest is that the E71 and N95's appearance shows how long lived some of these classic smartphones are!]

    However, if we look at these figures by form factor, we see:

    Full-face touchscreen - 26
    Qwerty candybar (Blackberry/E71-like) - 18
    Hybrid (Qwerty and touch, with mechanism) - 2
    T9 traditional - 2

    The fascinating bit here isn't that full-face touchscreens were most popular - this is just about the only form factor you'll see being pushed and adored by the tech media over the last couple of years, so no surprise here. The fascinating bit is that 'qwerty candybars' (or 'qwerty slabs') were almost as popular.

    However much the fashion seems to be for ever-growing device sizes to accommodate ever-larger touch displays, it seems that, for practical on-the-go access, at least, the likes of the Blackberry Curve remain as popular as ever. Certainly, when mobile, you can't guarantee that both of your hands will be free, you want a certain level of robustness, you want a certain level of insensitivity to unintentional knocks, all situations where pure touchscreen phones have issues.

    Nokia has had a big foot in this market since the E71's success and the E6's introduction, with many of the advantages of capacitive multi-touch but with all the 'pros' of the Qwerty candybar form factor, means that Nokia will continue to play a part here. Will the E6 sell as well as the E71 (and, to a lesser extent, the E72)?

    E6 (black)

    So from my own observations, it seems that the Qwerty candybar form factor is very much alive and well - whatever the size-obsessed tech press would have you believe. And, perhaps significantly, Nokia (with Symbian) and RIM (with Blackberry) are the only two smartphone players in this space - Android really, really doesn't scale down to this form factor and as for Apple, we all know what a certain Mr Jobs thinks of 'all this plastic'.... In other words, the same two huge manufacturers and smartphone platforms which are struggling in terms of financials and market share are also the only two that are active in this form factor, one which will (I suspect) remain popular for a far longer time.

    In other words, maybe the E6 will prove a more significant device in Nokia's bottom line that many would have believed?
    The Qwerty candybar - the not so forgotten form factor




    Hopefully more manufacturers will push this form factor. I'm tired of touch only and would like to have more options. More options are always good .
    07-29-11 01:54 PM
  2. howarmat's Avatar
    I would be curious to see results of this had it taken place in the US somewhere. Every region is very different. Take New York even compared to maybe Miami and you will see a difference im sure.
    07-29-11 01:58 PM
  3. _StephenBB81's Avatar
    Being in the US this week I have noticed far more dual phone users than I do in Canada, people with both an iPhone and Android, Blackberry and Android, Blackberry and iPhone, even a few dual blackberry people like me, crazy amount of iPads.
    But the thing I noticed most was the men 30+ all where using devices with keyboards and if they had a second phone it was on their waist.
    Everyone who seemed to be working was on Blackberry's many had Blackberry's and iPads, only saw one other playbook, though they hide really well

    Posted from my CrackBerry at wapforums.crackberry.com
    07-29-11 02:08 PM
  4. T�nis's Avatar
    I offer myself as proof that the candy bar form factor is alive and doing well in America:

    (1) I just renewed my contract and obtained a 9650, and

    (2) I hate touch screens, because I think they're grubby gimmicks.

    Posted from my CrackBerry at wapforums.crackberry.com
    07-29-11 03:12 PM
  5. K Bear's Avatar
    Once you go full touchscreen, it's hard to go back a physical keyboard. I've tried to go back to a physical keyboard, but kept going back to the virtual one 9 times out of 10. Some people will always be handcuffed to a physical qwerty keyboard, but more and more people are moving toward either combination physical/virtual or full virtual keyboards. Touchscreen devices are proving to neither be gimmick, nor archaic.
    [email protected] likes this.
    07-29-11 03:24 PM
  6. lnichols's Avatar
    I may give the all touch a try when the 9860 is available, and if I don't like it give it to one of my kids or just tough it out. Figure I need to start getting ready for QNX phones and start learning to type on virtual keyboard (even though I do OK on my Playbook). I've had a keyboard since the Treo600 (which also had touchscreen). Don't have any interest in anything the competition is offering as Blackberry is superior for communications while traveling internationally (reliable and efficient).
    07-29-11 03:31 PM
  7. rollingrock1988's Avatar
    I mean I want a touch screen too. But I also want a keyboard. I just don't like slide out keyboards like Droid 2/3. I like the torch though.
    07-29-11 03:50 PM
  8. T�nis's Avatar
    Once you go full touchscreen, it's hard to go back a physical keyboard. I've tried to go back to a physical keyboard, but kept going back to the virtual one 9 times out of 10. Some people will always be handcuffed to a physical qwerty keyboard, but more and more people are moving toward either combination physical/virtual or full virtual keyboards. Touchscreen devices are proving to neither be gimmick, nor archaic.
    When was your first touch screen? Was it the G2 in your sig? I had the Samsung Instinct when it first came out. Pure garbage. I hated the touch screen, and I'll never buy Samsung again.
    07-29-11 04:16 PM
  9. Economist101's Avatar
    When was your first touch screen? Was it the G2 in your sig? I had the Samsung Instinct when it first came out. Pure garbage. I hated the touch screen, and I'll never buy Samsung again.
    That's like saying you gave up on automobiles because that Yugo you owned in '87 royally sucked.
    avt123 and howarmat like this.
    07-29-11 04:31 PM
  10. T�nis's Avatar
    Bad analogy. Touch screen is touch screen.

    Posted from my CrackBerry at wapforums.crackberry.com
    07-29-11 04:39 PM
  11. howarmat's Avatar
    Bad analogy. Touch screen is touch screen.

    Posted from my CrackBerry at wapforums.crackberry.com
    completely false

    storm 1/2 is not the same as the iphone
    the iphone is not that same as an thunderbolt
    etc

    They all are different from feel to size to what ketboard you install. Please quit bringing only ignorance to the table.
    07-29-11 04:45 PM
  12. T�nis's Avatar
    Maybe so, but they're all grubby. If you deny that, it's a pure act of ignorance.

    Posted from my CrackBerry at wapforums.crackberry.com
    07-29-11 04:49 PM
  13. DenverRalphy's Avatar
    Maybe so, but they're all grubby. If you deny that, it's a pure act of ignorance.
    Mine isn't. But then I don't have Cheetos fingers when I use touchscreens either.
    07-29-11 04:55 PM
  14. howarmat's Avatar
    Maybe so, but they're all grubby. If you deny that, it's a pure act of ignorance.

    Posted from my CrackBerry at wapforums.crackberry.com
    please explain what makes them "grubby"
    07-29-11 04:58 PM
  15. T�nis's Avatar
    please explain what makes them "grubby"
    The screens tend to collect fingerprints and require extra effort to keep clean. The Instinct came with a stylus, but that was a pita, too.

    Posted from my CrackBerry at wapforums.crackberry.com
    07-29-11 05:01 PM
  16. DenverRalphy's Avatar
    The screens tend to collect fingerprints and require extra effort to keep clean. The Instinct came with a stylus, but that was a pita, too.

    Posted from my CrackBerry at wapforums.crackberry.com
    Two seconds of maintenance every couple days is a real hassle isn't it?
    avt123, howarmat and K Bear like this.
    07-29-11 05:06 PM
  17. howarmat's Avatar
    Two seconds of maintenance every couple days is a real hassle isn't it?
    lmao i know right? mine is pretty damn clean too. i would think that phones with keyboards are worse since they have the little spaces between the keys to collect dead skin and such
    07-29-11 05:14 PM
  18. Phil DeLong's Avatar
    I offer myself as proof that the candy bar form factor is alive and doing well in America:

    (1) I just renewed my contract and obtained a 9650, and

    (2) I hate touch screens, because I think they're grubby gimmicks.

    Posted from my CrackBerry at wapforums.crackberry.com
    Why on Earth would you use a renewal on a 9650 when new devices are finally right around the corner?
    07-29-11 05:20 PM
  19. avt123's Avatar
    The screens tend to collect fingerprints and require extra effort to keep clean. The Instinct came with a stylus, but that was a pita, too.

    Posted from my CrackBerry at wapforums.crackberry.com
    Extra effort? LOL. Sounds like extreme laziness to me. It takes no more than 2 seconds to remove fingerprints. Oleophobic screens are great. I mean, a screen protecter can prevent fingerprints if you are going to be that anal and lazy about a two second cleaning.

    I was cleaning my BB screens more than I do with my touchscreens. Not to mention the dust build up in the keyboard and the trackballs getting disgusting. Good thing those are gone now and replaced with a trackpad, even though I have a friend with a 9780 and his trackpad has already been recessed into the device for unknown reasons.

    The Instinct is a POS.
    scorpiodsu and K Bear like this.
    07-29-11 05:20 PM
  20. scorpiodsu's Avatar
    LOL @ anyone using the inSTINK as a basis to judge all touchscreens on. That's like saying, all restaurants are crap because I went to a bad restaurant. Do yourself a favor, pick up an LG Dare, Instinct, Storm, iPhone and Thunderbolt and you'll clearly see the difference in touchscreens and they are all nowhere near the same. Especially if basing touchscreen on a resistive touchscreen. There's a huge difference between using a resistive, capacitive and surepress just like there's a huge difference using a phone that actually has an OS optimized for a touchscreen.

    Also, a simple screen saver stops all the residue built up on a device. Having said that, there will always be a market for full physical QWERTY keyboards. The question will be, how big the market remains over the next few years.
    K Bear and avt123 like this.
    07-29-11 05:45 PM
  21. Laura Knotek's Avatar
    Having said that, there will always be a market for full physical QWERTY keyboards. The question will be, how big the market remains over the next few years.
    I suspect that touchscreens will become more popular than physical QWERTY keypads, even amongst users who originally preferred physical QWERTY keypads.

    Many people claim that touchscreens are more popular with younger users, and that older users prefer QWERTY keypads. However, I know a retired man who purchased in iPhone, since he would rather have a device with a bigger screen that was easier to read, rather than a device with a physical keypad but a smaller screen that was difficult for him to read. The big screens available on touchscreen devices might make these devices more popular in general, whether a user is young or old.
    07-29-11 05:55 PM
  22. scorpiodsu's Avatar
    I suspect that touchscreens will become more popular than physical QWERTY keypads, even amongst users who originally preferred physical QWERTY keypads.

    Many people claim that touchscreens are more popular with younger users, and that older users prefer QWERTY keypads. However, I know a retired man who purchased in iPhone, since he would rather have a device with a bigger screen that was easier to read, rather than a device with a physical keypad but a smaller screen that was difficult for him to read. The big screens available on touchscreen devices might make these devices more popular in general, whether a user is young or old.
    No disagreement here. I just think that there will always be room for physicall QWERTY. But I do think it will shrink. Kinda like flip phones will always be around but certainly not the same amount of people using them when compared to other physical designs.
    07-29-11 06:00 PM
  23. Phil DeLong's Avatar
    No disagreement here. I just think that there will always be room for physicall QWERTY. But I do think it will shrink. Kinda like flip phones will always be around but certainly not the same amount of people using them when compared to other physical designs.
    I agree with both of you. And I definitely agree that touchscreens can be much more useful for older people. The larger dialing keypad alone can be amazing for people with failing vision.
    07-29-11 06:01 PM
  24. Economist101's Avatar
    Why on Earth would you use a renewal on a 9650 when new devices are finally right around the corner?
    His comments suggest an absence of patience.
    scorpiodsu and psufan32 like this.
    07-29-11 06:06 PM
  25. T�nis's Avatar
    Why on Earth would you use a renewal on a 9650 when new devices are finally right around the corner?
    His comments suggest an absence of patience.
    Not in the least. I have no intention of getting any of the upcoming devices, and I don't need patience. If I were to desire one of the new devices, I would just buy one anyway, even after just buying the 9650. I don't sweat that stuff.

    As for devices, I think the Torch is a terrific device. It has a large screen for viewing and a physical keyboard for text input. I'd get one of those, but the first thing I would do is look for a way to shut off the touch feature. The same would apply if I was forced to get the 9900 (if, for example, older BlackBerries were no longer available). I'd get one, then look for a way to shut off the touch feature. Hopefully it would have that.
    07-29-11 06:15 PM
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