In the telephone history, keypad layouts and the positions of telephone dials have been associated with several patterns of mapping characters and letters to numbers. The system used in Denmark and the U.K were different from each other, and the system used in the U.K. was different from Australia and the U.S. In the 1960s, when direct international dialing was introduced, the use of alphanumeric codes for exchanges was abandoned in Europe. Because if the user dials a number VIC 8900 on a Danish telephone, and if dials this number on a British telephone, its result will be a different number. Therefore, at that time, letters were no included on the dials of new telephones.
Until the introduction of mobile phones, letters did not re-appear on phones in Europe, and the new international standard ITU E.161/ISO 9995-8 was followed by the layout. In the mid-1990s, an international standard (ITU E.161) was established by the ITU that the layout could be used for new devices. The ETSI ES 202 130 is a standard that was published by the independent ETSI organization in 2003 and updated in 2007, which deals with all languages used in Europe. Instead of traditional telephone keypads, many newer smartphones like BlackBerry and Palm Treo have full alphanumeric keyboards. To dial a number containing convenience letters, the user must execute additional steps. Followed by the desired letter user can press the Alt key On certain BlackBerry device.