Moto Development Labs devised a simple method of analyzing capacitive touch screens using drawing programs. They put the
iPhone, the Nexus One, the Droid, and the Droid Eris through the paces and proved not all touch screens are created equal.
Using only your fingers and a drawing app, Moto shows how you can test
out the accuracy of your smartphone’s touch screen. The test is simple:
draw some slow, steady lines across the screen with your finger. If
they’re smooth and straight, your touch screen is tracking with
relative accuracy. If they’re wavy or jagged, your phone might not be
giving your fingers the attention they deserve.
Moto’s test showed the iPhone tracking the most accurately of
the four, with smooth, straight lines. The Motorola Droid fared worst
of the bunch, its crossing lines tracking so jaggedly that the screen
looked like a jigsaw puzzle. The Eris and the Nexus One landed
somewhere in between.
If jagged lines are the symptoms of a subpar touch screen, Moto
suggests that the affliction can be any combination of too large a
sensor, too low a touch-sampling rate, or too inaccurate an algorithm.