Another metaphor for interface design:
The 17 Designs That Bell Almost Used for the Layout of Telephone Buttons

“This layout is so standardized that we barely think about it. But it was, in the 1950s, the result of a good deal of strategizing and testing on the part of people at Bell Labs. Numberphile has dug up an amazing paper — published in the July 1960 issue of “The Bell System Technical Journal” — that details the various alternative designs the Bell engineers considered. Among them: “the staircase” (II-B in the image above), “the ten-pin” (III-B, reminiscent of bowling-pin configurations), “the rainbow” (II-C), and various other versions that mimicked the circular logic of the existing dialing technology: the rotary.”
Stephen

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Continuing the Discussion
Good reminder not to automatically reproduce existing technology in new medium MT @sabram: Bell’s 17 Designs http://t.co/zWQML1y5s9
RT @sabram: The 17 Designs That Bell Almost Used for the Layout of Telephone Buttons: Another metaphor .. http://t.co/Ug4GyIR9wV
Lighthouse: The 17 Designs That Bell Almost Used for the Layout of Telephone Buttons http://t.co/Xzg6gS9vsR #librarian
17 Designs that Bell Almost Used for the Layout of Telephone Buttons @sabram via @Numberphile http://t.co/wAP1PYb9vN cc @HighTechHistory