Dictionary
keypad
noun
A small board with keys primarily used for tactile input into a machine.
synonyms
Ai Feedback
Exact(60)
"Grayson has some [security] keypad from his bank, but it is so complicated he's given up.
With robopolls, computers make calls automatically and participants answer the recorded voice using a keypad on their phone.
Letting people send messages in these languages involves transliterating the text or, in some cases, developing new ways of reading what has been written.Historically, the 26 letters of the Latin alphabet have been assigned to eight of the 12 buttons on a typical mobile-phone keypad, making it straightforward to compose text.
And a range of art-deco-styled fashion phones, launched in September, shows that Nokia can still be daring: one model even does away with the keypad, in favour of an iPod-style navigation wheel.
It can then be swivelled open, to reveal a standard mobile-phone keypad.
Allowing the phone to open and close protects the screen and also provides plenty of room for both display and keypad.
They have various modes ("sit", "stand" and "walk", and "ascend" and "descend" for staircases) and are controlled by a keypad worn on the wrist.
The customer would have to type this number on his phone's keypad because, for all its biometric bells and whistles, the VoiceVault program is not voice-recognition software of the sort that can be used to dictate documents.
A photographer friend of Babbage's notes that when he switched to the iPhone, he felt speedy compared to his chums that still relied on the older T9 predictive numeric keypad text entry system.
They then have to press a keypad to indicate when a dot has appeared on the screen.
"The appeal of speech is to flatten menus and to handle names that don't lend themselves to a ten-digit keypad".
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com