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Droid Touchscreen Less Accurate Than iPhone's

gyrogeerloose writes "A test published by MOTO labs comparing the accuracy and sensitivity of smartphone touchscreens among various makers gave the iPhone top marks ahead of HTC's Droid Eris, the Google-branded Nexus One and the Motorola Droid. The test was conducted within a drawing program using a finger to trace straight diagonal lines across the screens and then comparing the results. While it's not likely that a smart phone user is going to draw a lot of lines, the test does give some indication of which phones are most likely to properly respond to clicking on a link in a Web browser."

6 of 198 comments (clear)

  1. Obviously... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    This is not the droid you're looking for.

  2. Re:Well of course drawing lines is important by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    I own an iPhone, and I can draw complex images with my finger, scrult a 3D sculpture with a particular program I have, and accurately type and click. I have nothing to compare it to but i know how accurate the iPhone is.

    Your message didn't happen to be typed on said iPhone, did it?

  3. Re:Used "a program" ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "These aren't the results I wanted to see, therefore the methodology is flawed!"

  4. What's important by electricbern · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Although drawling lines might be important to some, what really matters to most smartphone users is how the phone responds to misclicks. Is it able to detect it and adjust accordingly? There is more to it then the accuracy of the screen. You are using your phone while standing or walking so even if the screen is 100% accurate you probably won't be. What kind of correction algorithm the phone has to compensate for that?
    Of course creating a considerate test is too much trouble and just saying that the iPhone touchscreen is more accurate then Google's scores you plenty of apple-love.

    --
    alias possession='chmod 666 satan && ls /dev > il && tail daemon.log'
  5. Not sure why this is supposed to be a problem by assantisz · · Score: 5, Informative

    I have a Droid and I just tried drawing diagonals in a paint program on the phone. Yes, I did get the waviness. All that means, though, is that the Droid is not a good choice for a phone if you want to draw on it. I am still able to use the on-screen keyboard just fine and even in a web browser I never have problems tapping a link no matter how far I am zoomed out. This is definitely not a deal-breaker for me. That said, the only reason why I have a Droid is because of the physical keyboard and a pretty decent free ssh client. The kids draw on it but they couldn't care less how straight the lines are or not.

  6. Resolution? by phobos512 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    What effect does the fact that the iPhone has a vastly lower resolution screen play in this accuracy "test"? Seems it would make it easier to be more accurate.