This might be part of it, and is true in the UK too, though many phones didn't display it. I've never in the UK seen an ad (for example) telling someone to dial a particular word, but the third and forth numbers of area codes are tied to the alphabet. For example, Chichester, at 01243:Add to this that they always, here in the US, had the alphabet imbedded starting with ABC coinciding with the number 2.
Just don't answer the puppy...It's just necessary so that you don't confuse two different devices. Older people often confuse any keyboards, dial numbers on calculators, and try to call from the TV remote. I think the manufacturers are aware of this, which is why they did such a trick with different layouts of numbers. But now it doesn't matter because all smartphones use keyboards on which the numbers are in a row from left to right. I never miss the keys on new smartphones. And I also try to pass all the captchas correctly. By the way, I often use software to generate phone number. I don't want to leave my number on social networks because I'm afraid of online spammers.
So it is likely a system based on typing and number frequency, just like the letter keyboard.
Been there, done thatOlder people often confuse any keyboards, dial numbers on calculators, and try to call from the TV remote
What is special about the lowest numbers that they would be closest to the starting position? We don't use keypads to count.I think it's simply that numeric keypads have the lowest numbers closest to the hand's starting position, which is at the bottom. The hand tracks from the bottom upwards in the same way that the eye tracks from left to right.
The calculator layout preceded the telephone layout. It was used in early mechanical adding machines. I would say it is more logical than having one to nine followed by zero.I had to look at a calculator to confirm how weird it is: Left to right, bottom to top? Or, counting down, right to left, top to bottom? That in no way fits with any sort of western ordering paradigm.
So it is likely a system based on typing and number frequency, just like the letter keyboard.
No, I'm saying I was flummoxed by this Sum thingyEdit. I read that wrong.
@Danny McG Are you saying your phone does it better than a dedicated calculator?
It was also true, on old rotary dialling phones, that the emergency number 999 in Britain was chosen both because it was easy to dial in the dark for grown-ups and difficult to dial in any conditions for children, which meant that young children playing with the phone that they found in their house, were unlikely to call emergency services when playing.I don’t know how the original positioning of the digits was established for telephones but once it was I couldn’t be changed. The known positioning of the 9 on telephones is important for dialling the emergency number in the dark.
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