Nokia's upper management quickly reverses its thoughts on optical and touch sensitive interfaces for mobile devices
Last week Nokia gave a vote of no confidence to the use of
touchscreen technology in mobile phones. In an interview with Swedish
newspaper, E24.SE, Nokia's General Manager of Mobile Devices, Antti
Vasara, simply said that users prefer
keyboards and joysticks over touchscreen displays and that Nokia is not
enthusiastic about touch screens. Despite this, he did say that if Nokia sees
the demand for touch screens, the company would use them in mobile devices.
A week later it seems that Nokia has seen the demand for touchscreen technology
in mobile phones. Tero Ojanpera, Chief Technology Officer of Nokia, yesterday
said, "Optical sensors and touch will be the next big things."
His statement is a 180 degree turn from what Vasara said last week.
Ojanpera lauded touch screens, claiming the technology would allow cell phone
makers to hide keypads. In addition, he said that movement sensors would also
bring new and unheard of features to mobile phones. Ojanpera believes there will be a large
amount of innovation between these two technologies.
HTC, LG and Apple all embraced touch screen technology. Dell and
Hewlett-Packard pushed touch-sensitive displays for almost a decade on some
devices.
Nokia, one of the few companies that refused to offer a Windows Mobile phone,
might face its sudden interface problem alone. Over the last year,
Microsoft unveiled optical and touch sensitive technology at a brisk pace with
platforms like Surface, Deepfish and HTC's TouchFLO.
Yet with Nokia's strong support for Symbian on its existing devices, the
likelihood that Microsoft's sensing technologies will ever appear on a Nokia
device is rapidly diminishing.
"Well, there may be a reason why they call them 'Mac' trucks! Windows machines will not be trucks." -- Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer
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