Calculator VS Phone |
Reason for ZERO begins at bottom on
both Phone & calculator;
The story begins back in pre-calculator days, when there
were mechanical cash registers. These cash registers were designed with “0” at
the bottom, and the numbers going up. This is because “0” is the most used
number while making numerous calculations and it made complete sense to place
it there so that it is accessible to the fingers easily. And when mechanical calculators made their appearance, they used
the same format as the cash register with 0 at the bottom and 9 on top
.
Arrangement Numbers on the
Calculators;
Later, when hand-held and electronic calculators were
invented, they implemented the keypad arrangement of the existing calculators –
0 at the bottom, remaining numbers going from 1 in the bottom left corner to 9
in the top right corner. Hence, basically, it evolved from the cash register
and the calculators still use the same pattern.
Arrangement Numbers on
the Phones;
But When Touch-Tone
Telephones Were Invented, Why Did They Change Their Layout Without Simply
Replicating the Calculator Keypad Layout?
Before the Touch-Tone phones emerged in the early 1960s,
there were rotary dials. Instead of buttons, the numbers on the telephone were
holes from 1-9, and then 0. The idea was to stick your finger in the hole and
spin it around to dial each number.
In the early 1960s, researchers at Bell Laboratories were
preparing to introduce an alternative to the rotary telephone, something they
called push-button dialing (which later came to be marketed as “Touch Tone” dialing).
But there was one big question in front of them: how to arrange the numbers.
They conducted a study titled “Human Factor Engineering Studies of the Design
and Use of Pushbutton Telephone Sets,” and tested several different
telephone-keypad layouts to find out which was easiest to master.
Numbers reversed on Calculator &
Phones;
At last the arrangement of numbers was finalized, after
testing several layouts, including one that used two rows with five numbers
each and another that used a circular positioning, it was determined that the
three-by-three matrix that had 1, 2 and 3 across the top was the easiest for
people to use and had the lowest error rate.
As an Engineer, I'm interested and curious about the "Why" and the "How" things work. Thank you for the education regarding the evolution of the number/letter arrangement of the telephone.
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