iPhone wins smartphone touchscreen performance test

Nexus One vs. iPhone vs. Droid vs. Droid Eris
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Which is the best touchscreen of them all? MOTO Development Group has unveiled a video and photographs of a touchscreen performance test between the Google Nexus One, the Apple iPhone, the Motorola Droid, and the HTC Verizon Droid Eris.

The idea is simple and allows anyone to evaluate the resolution and accuracy of touchscreen devices before they buy. To conduct the test, consumers open a basic drawing program and draw a few diagonal lines drawn across the screen.

Draw Slowly. On a quality touchscreen, people can draw clean straight lines, even while going very slowly. The image that appears on screen accurately represents the slowly drawn lines. However, on inferior touchscreens, it’s basically impossible to draw straight lines. Instead, the lines look jagged, stair-stepped or zig-zag, no matter how slowly you go. The inferior image results from the sensor size is too big, the touch-sampling rate is too low, and/or the algorithms that convert gestures into images are too non-linear to faithfully represent user inputs.

Pressure Matters. A good touchscreen device will produce linear output regardless of whether you're using the full pad of your finger, or just the edge. If you want to test the most extreme performance, draw very lightly with the edge of your finger. The artifacts will increase significantly, showing which device is really the best with a weak signal.

Even on a single device, the amount of pressure and the part of the finger you use on the screen has an impact on how well it senses. This is important because quick keyboard use and light flicks on the screen really push the limits of the touch panel's ability to sense.

A good touchscreen device will produce linear output regardless of whether you're using the full pad of your finger, or just the dry corner of your cuticle. When comparing devices, make sure to use even pressure across all of them.

Millimeters Matter. Small differences in touchscreen sensitivity actually reveal exponential difference in performance. Less sensitive touchscreen systems are infuriating to use for typing.

And the Winner Is…

The iPhone! The iPhone’s touch sensor showed the most linear tracking with the least amount of stair-stepping. The Droid Eris and Nexus One tied for second with only faint wiggling – but actually performed best at the edge of the screen. Last in the line-up was the Motorola Droid, which demonstrated significant wavy artifacts or “stair-stepping.”

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Subscribe to comments feed Comments (5 posted):

AndrewGoldy on 11/01/2010 08:45:41
Hahaha... iPhone wins hands down!

I didn't even realise that this was a important test for phones until now! Awesome!
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Szavazok Szavazok
Pieter Hugo on 23/01/2010 07:51:14
Can I upload my comparison done on a new Nokia Maemo powered N900? Perfectly straight lines. Beats all those phones on most other specs as well
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Szavazok Szavazok
Cell phone on 31/03/2010 06:11:29
I'm thinking about getting an iPhone to replace my Nokia 63 cell phone. I'm on the fence though because I'm not convinced that upgrading from one to the other is all that worth the money. Should I stick with the <a href="http://www.Dozenmobile.com">cell phone</a> or go iPhone?
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Szavazok Szavazok
Cell phone on 31/03/2010 06:12:32
I'm thinking about getting an iPhone to replace my Nokia 63 cell phone. I'm on the fence though because I'm not convinced that upgrading from one to the other is all that worth the money. Should I stick with the cell phone or go iPhone?
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Szavazok Szavazok
s-cape adjustable bed on 17/08/2010 03:43:40
Congratulations! Thank you for sharing the information!
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Szavazok Szavazok

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