You can do this in settings, under general, and then keyboard. If this doesn't work, bring your iPhone 4 into an Apple store, and one of the Apple store employees can help you change the qwerty board to the 3x4 keyboard.
It is because the qwerty keyboard is used universally. Most people are used to the qwerty keyboard layout but there are some keyboard layout that you can also consider the devorak and colemak
Keys - as in a board of keys = keyboard
It is called a QWERTY keyboard because of the first 6 letters on your keyboard. Look at your keyboard and look at the first six letters at the top. It will be 'qwerty' hence the name.
Yes, it has a virtual QWERTY keyboard on the front touch screen and also flips open sideways to reveal a QWERTY keyboard.
The QWERTY keyboard used in most modern English language computers was invented by Christopher Sholes in 1874. The layout has been modified and added to many times since then.
The period key (full stop) is two keys to the left of the shift key (located on the right side of the keyboard on a standard qwerty board).
Infinity is not a standard feature on a Qwerty board, but many progams such as MS Word have a special function that allow you to insert nonstandard keyboard symbols like infinity.In addition with most applications if you hold down the 'Alt' key and type the number 236 it will display the infinity symbol. ∞
Open the settings application, press language and keyboard, input method, and change the keyboard just like that.
no, it is a candy bar. it has a qwerty key board but that comes up on the screen. ;)
Yes, the color of an iPhone keyboard can be changed in a few easy steps.
well, there are 3 phones in the samsung genio range, the samsung genio touch, genio txt, and genio pro. The samsung genio touch does not have a built in qwerty board, however the genio pro and txt do. They will be available in the UK this month. That is why you saw the image with the keyboard on Google images. Good luck, and u should wait for the genio pro, its the best phone of the three.
QWERTY (qwhir-tee) is the most common modern-day keyboard layout on English-language computer and typewriter keyboards. It takes its name from the first six characters seen in the far left of the keyboard's top first row of letters. The QWERTY design was patented by Christopher Sholes in 1874. The patent was sold to Remington Arms, (later Remington Rand) and used for their typewriters. QWERTY is the standard keyboard denoted by the letters on the top line of characters. It was originally developed to separate and distribute the key movements on manual typewriters to reduce jamming of the keys. Because touch typists have learned this arrangement, it was retained for computer keyboards. Note: There are other different types of keyboards, such as the AZERTY (used in french speaking languages, except in Canada that uses the QWERTY), and QWERTZ (used in Germany and Eastern and Central Europe); as well as those used for stenographs.