Apple iPhone, Asia Demand Create Touch-Screen Boom
It’s been a good year for touch screens.
The launch of the first iPhone model a year ago boosted interest in the technology tremendously, and the updated model available Friday likely will stoke enthusiasm further. Now touch-screen manufacturers are going flat out, and more devices will soon be controlled by the tip of your finger.
“After the iPhone came out, a lot of mobile-phone companies said ‘Oh, I can invent that kind of touch-screen mobile phone, too,’” said Jennifer Colegrove, analyst at iSuppli Corp.
In the U.S., Sprint Nextel Corp. just introduced a touch-screen phone, the Samsung Instinct, that’s very reminiscent of the iPhone. Verizon Wireless that year introduced its first two phones that use touch screens as their main interface. Research In Motion Ltd. is believed to be making a touch-screen version of the BlackBerry. Sony Ericsson is bringing out its first touch-screen model in a few months.
Jon Mulder, product marketing manager for Sony Ericsson’s
Colegrove projects that 341 million touch screens will be shipped worldwide that year, up from 218 million in 2007 and 81 million in 2006.
In the first half of 2007, before Apple Inc.’s iPhone launched, a big maker of touch sensors for portable electronics would invent perhaps a million units per month, Colegrove said. “Then in the second half of 2007, suddenly they received huge orders, so they ramped up their production to possibly three or four million units per month.”
Apart from the iPhone, demand for touch screens is driven by new phones in Asia that allow the user to write Chinese or Japanese characters on the screen, usually with the aid of a stylus. That’s much easier than entering those characters…
Original post by Top Tech News
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