European crash tester says carmakers must bring back physical controls

boem@lemmy.world to Technology@lemmy.world – 1735 points –
European crash tester says carmakers must bring back physical controls
arstechnica.com
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Enjoying tech is one thing, wanting touchscreens everywhere is another. If they were so cool as an input device, all the cool kids would have ditched their mechanical keyboards from their desks.

Maybe the ubiquity of smart phones and all the functionality packed in to them has created a “touch screen == high tech” association in the general public.

But those of us who work with tech rather than just consuming it know the difference between functionality and UI. And we use nice physical interfaces like mouse + kb to interact with various tech all day, even if we use our phones too.

I have a love/hate relationship with phone touch screens. On the one hand it enables us to have controls that would be impossible on a phone, like selecting a point on a map, infinite variety of button controls, etc. On the other hand I can't tell you how many times I've barely brushed the screen by accident and the damn thing is off doing something I didn't want. "NO! DON'T SHUT OFF THE APP YOU....sigh"

I believe this thinking is what the car companies are banking on too, assuming people see 3-4 screens means it's more premium when I just screams the opposite to me and those I know.

Yep, physical input devices all the way. I literally just upgraded my computer from an Aya neo (touch screen only), to a GPD Win 4 specifically to have more physical inputs. While the Win 4 is also a handheld gaming pc (that is even smaller than the Aya), it has a slide out keyboard and an optical mouse sensor, which has honestly made so much of a difference in being able to use the device. Even just simple things like scrolling through Steam has become easier, never mind situations that involve any sort of typing.

I still love my Aya though, things a tank.

I would happily buy an iPhone with a physical keyboard under a slider. Much faster and more accurate than using Swype.

It's not the first time someone comes up with the next great thing that ends up being a user interface disaster. Light pens (w/ link for the younger crowd) come to mind.

Ooof. I remeber using light pens in the 80s at a dumb terminal at my local library to find books. It was painful...

Anyone remembers dumb terminals?

Dumb terminals were extremely prevelant throughout the 80s and into the early-mid 90s. Most people just didn't know that they were "dumb terminals" and either just thought they were early desktop computers or just heard them referred to as a "terminal". That same library didn't update their dumb terminals to actual computers until the mid 90s, but they did however remove the light pen in favor of a keyboard at some point well before then.

This is Lenny. Most users probably do. Good percentage still have a few. A few of us make new ones now and then.

(Technically not dumb ones, though. And completely excluding terminal emulators, which are of course ubiquitous.)

Oh boy, forgot about those. Every school library used one to read a barcode.

all the cool kids would have ditched their mechanical keyboards

I never thought of it this way, but it make sense.