Does the iPhone need a real keyboard?
CNET Poll
The other day, as I sat waiting for Jeff Bezos to appear in an auditorium to announce the new Kindle DX, I was surrounded by iPhones. Literally. Two people to my right, two people in front of me, and three people in back of me were all tapping out IMs or e-mails on their iPhones. What struck me was how awkward most of these people looked, tapping away with a single finger, laboring to type sentences just a few lines long.
Now I know some people can type quickly using the iPhone's virtual keyboard. A week earlier I'd witnessed a woman, her iPhone sitting on a table, taping with two fingers at a highly elevated rate (the rat-tat-tat of her typing on the table was quite noisy, which drew onlookers). But there are still a lot of people out there who just can't get used to typing on the iPhone. And many a BlackBerry user has told me she will never be able to switch to the iPhone because she needs a physical keyboard.
My wife is a case in point. She lives on her Blackberry and can type emails with astonishing speed. When she was required recently to get a "personal" cell phone separate from her work cell phone, she opted to get the exact same BlackBerry Curve on AT&T that she used for work--even though she could have gotten the iPhone for the same price (at least in terms of hardware costs). She's a BlackBerry user through and through, even after a couple of her BlackBerries broke (more on that in a minute).
I wouldn't be the first to suggest that Apple make a slider version of the iPhone that would incorporate a physical keyboard. On a lot of levels, it would make a lot of sense. Apple could do a so-called consumer version of the iPhone, as well as a model that had a slightly more corporate bent to take on BlackBerry directly in that market. (The BlackBerry Curve did outsell the iPhone last quarter).
However, the iPhone's virtual keyboard is tied into an overarching Apple design philosophy for the device, and chances are very slim Apple will alter the iPhone hardware beyond a few small tweaks. From a software standpoint, where the biggest changes will come, one of the key additions in iPhone 3.0 OS is native support for a landscape (horizontal) virtual keyboard, which would allow you to go to a more ergonomic two-thumbed approach and should make the overall typing experience significantly better. True, that functionality has been available for a while--but only through third-party apps that only a small minority of users download.
The rumored Motorola Android phone looks a lot like my dream iPhone.
(Credit: The Boy Genius Report )Will having a native landscape mode for the virtual keyboard satisfy BlackBerry keyboard aficionados? Probably not. As good as Apple's virtual keyboard might be for a virtual keyboard you'll still have millions of people who only feel comfortable with a physical keyboard.
Personally, I'm partial to hard keyboards and I initially liked the slide-out keyboard on my Sprint Mogul, though I still miss the feel of the Blackberry keyboard on my ancient, e-mail-only BlackBerry 857. However, there is one big strike against physical keyboards: because you have moving parts involved, they tend to be plagued by mechanical failures over time. My Mogul keyboard is on the fritz, and some days I want to throw the phone against the wall (my contract is up in June, which is when I will replace it). Fellow editor John Falcone, who got his Mogul at around the same time I did, is also having problem with his keyboard, which leads me to believe many physical keyboards simply have a limited lifespan. In the case of the Mogul, which is made by HTC, the problem may involve the sliding mechanism and the connection between the keyboard and the phone's motherboard--not necessarily the keys themselves.
Blackberry keyboards tend to be pretty durable. But my wife's scroll wheel on two her older Blackberries died from heavy use. Apparently, this problem was widespread because in future devices Blackberry moved to a trackball in the Curve. But it, too, can develop problems over time as dust and dirt from your fingers clog things up--just like with a computer trackball.
Clearly, by going with a virtual keyboard--and a pure touch interface--Apple and AT&T have managed to avoid customer-service headaches related to the breakdown of broken parts associated with physical keyboards, navigational joysticks, trackballs, or scroll wheels. When an iPhone gets screwed up, it tends to involve a bum battery, some form of mysterious internal glitch that causes intermittent freezes/shutdowns or battery drains--or someone just dropping the phone. At least those are the problems I hear about.
But even as I point out the downsides to physical keyboards, I'd still opt for an iPhone with a slide-out "hard" keyboard if given the choice. That's part of the reason why I'll take a long look at the Palm Pre when it comes out around the same time the third-generation iPhone does (both are expected to arrive in June) and anything new and interesting BlackBerry has on tap.
What do you guys think? Any iPhone owners still struggling with the keyboard? Or is it just fine the way it is and will only get better with a native landscape mode?
Hunkered down in New York City, Executive Editor David Carnoy covers the gamut of gadgets and writes his Fully Equipped column, which carries the tag line "The electronics you lust for." He's also the author of "Knife Music," a novel. E-mail David. Follow David on Twitter.

In terms of Blackberries I think the Bold has the best keyboard of all of them...
However, after a while, you get up to speed and it's quite easy typing on the virtual qwerty. So, in essence, the iPhone keyboard is just fine after a while..
So much about new technology for consumers has to do with what we're comfortable with. If you're ready and willing to engage the learning curve, then it's not going to work for you.
the the touchscreen keyboard is joy to use after a bit of Practice !
I would never go back to a plastic Qwerty keyboard !
P.S. Look at that picture of the authors dream iPhone...it's hideous!
Sure, people want tactile keyboards, and maybe a lot of these nay sayers just hate apple for whatever reason... that's fine... but what they need to learn is the system that the iphone has now works. It saves real-estate while still providing a good user experience. It's just that people are too afraid to put their trust into the auto-correction, and would rather sit there poking one letter at a time instead.
I text while I walk, and don't need to look at the keyboard while I write (I think we've all run into those people on the street who are so wrapped up in their smartphone they could get hit by a car), but I really need the physical keyboard to do this--to guide my thumbs: that's why I have a Blackberry Curve. It's always shoved in my pocket or in my gym bag and I've never had any issues with the moving parts so I feel like it's durable enough for me and my habits.
On the other hand, I have an iPod Touch and it's easy enough to write things down when I'm not on the go--there was a learning curve, but when you're sitting on an airplane bored out of your mind or in the subway, there's time to pick it up, fiddle around--any techcentric person can learn it easily enough. That being said, the minute Apple comes out with an iPhone with a keyboard (if they do, rather), essentially marrying my two devices, I'll be sold because that's what works the best for my on-the-go life.
FYI.
:)
Ummm...Come to think about it probably not. I guess that's a mystery left unsolved for another day XD
www.twitter.com/JBundyLive
.....oh wait..........you probably dont get out much.....nevermind then :)
1) Enough with useless stories about the iPhone keyboard. How many times are you going to write about this? It is QUITE obvious Apple won't change the iPhone to have a physical keyboard. Typical Apple - they know their technology
2) Yes, landscape will help. But at the same time, you have to do two different sets of muscle training with your fingers since they are essentially two different sized keyboards. The option is nice, though. And I do think people will find typing in landscape a bit faster and more accurate since the space between keys isn't so small.
3) For anyone having trouble with typing on a virtual keyboard, download a typing app. If you're the type of user to use two fingers on a REAL keyboard on a computer then you are just too lazy to take a typing class (there are free online ones everywhere). iPhone has typing apps too (idle hands is one I know of) to train. Practice = muscle training. I can type on my iPhone at about 50wpm with ~90% accuracy. Just takes practice!
i'm virtual all the way.
i've gotten pretty fast if i do say so myself...
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by adamk1101
May 12, 2009 12:38 PM PDT
- Until it has a keyboard, it can't be considered a smartphone.
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by DOGLLAMA
May 12, 2009 3:59 PM PDT
- it does have a keyboard. you just have to be smart enough to turn it on.
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by montex66
May 12, 2009 6:08 PM PDT
- That is just a completely stupid thing to claim. But something I'd expect from a typical PC enthusiast who is more concerned with all the hardware specs than they are with what the device can actually do. These are the same people who say the iPod is a failure because it doesn't have an AM/FM radio in it.
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by seven7dust
May 12, 2009 11:31 PM PDT
- and the award for stupidest comment of the day goes to adamk1101 !
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by curtiskelowna
May 13, 2009 7:51 PM PDT
- actually he's right...the first smartphones were known as smartphones for their "FULL KEYBOARD" The iphone.....meh..........its ok but it doesnt seem like a true smart phone without a tactile keyboard. Its kinda like a male crossdresser. Its still got the makings of a smartphone under the hood but on the surface it looks no smarter than pam anderson
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by DOGLLAMA
May 13, 2009 8:07 PM PDT
- it does have a full keyboard, it is just a virtual keyboard. computers used to count 1's and 0's by reading punch cards, but they evolved onto a digital frontier. its the same with the iphone and tough luck, its just the beginning, so if you don't like it, you can go hang out at the Creationism Museum and chat about how great 8 tracks were....
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by adamk1101
May 14, 2009 6:49 AM PDT
- In response to montex66: ("That is just a completely stupid thing to claim. But something I'd expect from a typical PC enthusiast "),
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Showing 1 of 6 pages (179 Comments)I'm a mac user actually. I use a mac pro and a macbook pro for my job as a systems admin. I simply need a real smartphone that helps me get my work done rather than kill time with pointless apps, so I use a blackberry 9000 (bold). Also, for what it's worth, I have an iPhone 3G which I got through work but other than the browser, I don't find much use for it so I don't use it. And the iPod is not a failure. I have the 160gb classic and I LOVE it.