The first mobile phones, which were like bricks with telescopic aerials, had chunky number keys like landline handsets. As the handsets shrank, these turned into little clicky buttons, but you still only got 0-9, plus star and hash. Typing meant hitting numbers repeatedly to cycle through letters, a skill quickly mastered by the young who learned, like ancient Hebrew scribes, that it was faster to leave out the vowels.
With the iPhone, the buttons moved on to the screen, where there was room for the whole alphabet. But you had to look, you couldn’t touch-type. BlackBerry owner RIM had been cramming QWERTY keyboards into phones since they were pagers (pictured), and never stopped.
The KEYone’s buttons, though, aren’t what they used to be. Rather than hard and clicky they’re rubbery…
