Is the switch to Dvorak worth it? - Stack Overflow most recent 30 from stackoverflow.com 2009-11-28T16:56:06Z http://stackoverflow.com/feeds/question/455525 http://www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.5/rdf http://stackoverflow.com/questions/455525/is-the-switch-to-dvorak-worth-it 23 Is the switch to Dvorak worth it? Kevin Weil 2009-01-18T17:27:56Z 2009-11-18T17:33:50Z <p>To those who were experienced (> 70 WPM, say) typists before the switch to Dvorak -- were you faster after switching? </p> <p>There are a couple good SO threads on Dvorak, but they are more on <a href="http://stackoverflow.com/questions/88010/what-is-the-best-way-to-learn-dvorak">how to learn</a> or <a href="http://stackoverflow.com/questions/171597/dvorak-vs-qwerty">reduction in typing pain</a> than speed before/after. I know it will take me 1-2 months to feel comfortable, but I want to know if I should expect to be faster afterward. I am a programmer and type maybe 90-110 WPM on QWERTY.</p> <p>EDIT: I agree that coding is not typically IO-bound, and that a minimum typing speed is sufficient. This is half from curiosity, but it will be an undertaking to achieve QWERTY parity, so I want to know if I should at least expect some asymptotic improvement.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/455525/is-the-switch-to-dvorak-worth-it/455534#455534 4 Answer by Mehrdad Afshari for Is the switch to Dvorak worth it? Mehrdad Afshari 2009-01-18T17:32:44Z 2009-01-18T17:32:44Z <p>I think it helps reduce pain more than increasing speed.</p> <p>While I completely agree with Jeff that we're typists first, programmers second, I think programming needs a minimum typing speed rather than being the fastest typist on the planet. Since it's a "compute-bound" task, you just want to make your I/O delay as low as it doesn't make your brain wait for it. After that barrier, more speed will not have much positive effect as it's no longer the bottleneck.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/455525/is-the-switch-to-dvorak-worth-it/455536#455536 5 Answer by Jeff Bauer for Is the switch to Dvorak worth it? Jeff Bauer 2009-01-18T17:33:50Z 2009-01-18T17:33:50Z <p>Not according to this article: <a href="http://www.reason.com/news/show/29944.html" rel="nofollow">Typing Errors</a></p> <p><em>"The standard typewriter keyboard is Exhibit A in the hottest new case against markets. But the evidence has been cooked."</em></p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/455525/is-the-switch-to-dvorak-worth-it/455538#455538 0 Answer by dicroce for Is the switch to Dvorak worth it? dicroce 2009-01-18T17:34:11Z 2009-01-18T17:34:11Z <p>I've never learned Dvorak, but I have known some people who have. 1) You will probably be surprised at how quick you pick it up. If you really go for it, you will probably be proficient in a week or two. 2) About half the people I've known who learned dvorak claim that it made them forget QWERTY!</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/455525/is-the-switch-to-dvorak-worth-it/455541#455541 4 Answer by Michael Buen for Is the switch to Dvorak worth it? Michael Buen 2009-01-18T17:35:49Z 2009-01-18T17:50:34Z <p>Yes it's worth it. I'm able to type faster(letters on left side and right side are equally distributed) and comfortably with Dvorak than Qwerty.</p> <p>And you'll have a lesser chance of developing RSI, both hands are utilized equally.</p> <p>Using Dvorak layout for 13 years.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/455525/is-the-switch-to-dvorak-worth-it/455578#455578 23 Answer by Jay Bazuzi for Is the switch to Dvorak worth it? Jay Bazuzi 2009-01-18T17:49:15Z 2009-01-18T17:49:15Z <p>I tried teaching myself Dvorak one summer. The first week was really, really hard. I have been typing for so long that it has become a very natural way for me to express myself. Suddenly typing at a fraction of my normal speed meant I couldn't express myself any more. It was 10+ years ago and I still cringe when I think of it.</p> <p>I had taken the time to move the keycaps around on my keyboard, but when I decided to go back to QWERTY, I didn't bother moving they keycaps back. I could still type fine, since I don't look when typing QWERTY, but everyone else would get confused as soon as they looked down. Ha ha.</p> <p>A friend at work succeeded at switching to Dvorak, and ran in to some challenges associated with working in a team environment. Whenever someone came to his office to look at something, they would have a hard time working. When he would Remote Desktop to a server, and then someone else would connect to the same session later, it would sometimes be in Dvorak mode. When he went to someone else's computer to look at something, he still had to type QWERTY when he got there, so he couldn't go 100% Dvorak.</p> <p>He said it made him a slightly faster typist, but didn't think it was worth the initial and ongoing challenges.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/455525/is-the-switch-to-dvorak-worth-it/455581#455581 10 Answer by vinc456 for Is the switch to Dvorak worth it? vinc456 2009-01-18T17:51:20Z 2009-01-18T17:51:20Z <p>In my opinion it is not worth it. I'm a touch typist in QWERTY that types approximately in the 100 WPM range and I learned Dvorak because I didn't have anything better to do while catching the train.</p> <p>Anyways I feel like it's been mostly a waste of time because </p> <ul> <li>I have not seen any improvement in my typing speed. I am nowhere near as fast (50wpm) in Dvorak due to lack to practice, and when you're learning it is very easy/tempting to fall back on qwerty habits. <ul> <li>There is a QWERTY lock-in and nobody uses Dvorak. Even on computers with which I am allowed to remap the keyboard, I've found this to be too much of a hassle and it's faster to just bang it out in qwerty</li> <li>If you use a lot of hotkeys with applications like window manager and emacs it's painful to go against muscle memory.</li> </ul></li> </ul> <p>Anyways I wouldn't bother learning Dvorak unless you were really worried about RSI or you were a secretary or some sort. My experience has been that with coding the bottleneck is how quickly you can think of a solution, not type it out.</p> <p>On the other hand if there were some convenient portable way to type in some hybrid method, (ie: dvorak unless the control or meta modifier key was depressed, in which case default to qwerty) then I would probably give that a try. I think this is easily toggled on Macs but I haven't found a way to do this in Linux.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/455525/is-the-switch-to-dvorak-worth-it/455624#455624 7 Answer by Hao for Is the switch to Dvorak worth it? Hao 2009-01-18T18:21:17Z 2009-01-18T20:33:55Z <p>Article from: <a href="http://dturnbull.newsvine.com/_news/2008/11/02/2064576-why-programmers-should-use-the-dvorak-keyboard-layout" rel="nofollow">http://dturnbull.newsvine.com/_news/2008/11/02/2064576-why-programmers-should-use-the-dvorak-keyboard-layout</a></p> <blockquote> <p>As a computer professional, you've probably done some typing over the years. A lot of typing. And your hands don't always love you for it. If you are concerned about catching the carpal tunnel syndrome, you should be looking into Dvorak keyboards. They have been designed to minimize the finger movement for the most common phrases you type. And when your finger move less, they get less strain too.</p> <p>Dvorak keyboards are mostly known for their ability to speed up typing. Along with this comes the usual crowd of naysayers that state that it hasn't been proved that Dvorak actually is faster that Qwerty. <strong>However, no-one has ever produced evidence that it is slower either.</strong> And they're really missing the point, too. <strong>It isn't about being faster, it is about being easier.</strong> Dvorak keyboards are easier because they have been designed so that the most common phrases are located nearer the base position of your fingers.</p> </blockquote> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/455525/is-the-switch-to-dvorak-worth-it/455655#455655 2 Answer by JaredPar for Is the switch to Dvorak worth it? JaredPar 2009-01-18T18:29:59Z 2009-01-18T18:29:59Z <p>I did a long blog post on this very subject a few days ago. </p> <p><a href="http://blogs.msdn.com/jaredpar/archive/2009/01/12/dvorak-keyboard-is-it-really-faster-gasp.aspx" rel="nofollow">http://blogs.msdn.com/jaredpar/archive/2009/01/12/dvorak-keyboard-is-it-really-faster-gasp.aspx</a></p> <p>In Summary:</p> <p>Was the switch worth it? For me, yes. But the reasons I feel like it was worth it are very subjective. The only concrete gain I had was WPM. But that alone would not be worth the switch (what's a gain of 5 WPM worth when you're already in the 70 range). </p> <p>Do I feel like Dvorak is the right choice for most programmers. No. The gains are mostly subjective and there are a few detractors. But if you enjoy a challenge and have a few months to kill ...</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/455525/is-the-switch-to-dvorak-worth-it/455683#455683 2 Answer by GeoffreyF67 for Is the switch to Dvorak worth it? GeoffreyF67 2009-01-18T18:42:13Z 2009-01-18T18:42:13Z <p>I've been a code monkey for over 20 years and have found that the best solution to avoid RSI is simply to take short breaks here and there.</p> <p>To me, there are simply too many downsides to learning Dvorak although I've considered it in the past. Most of the downsides entail working with other people or having them work with you.</p> <p>Honestly, what is that 30 characters a second going to buy you for the investment in your time to get to that point and investment in your time to continue using Dvorak?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/455525/is-the-switch-to-dvorak-worth-it/455714#455714 0 Answer by toby for Is the switch to Dvorak worth it? toby 2009-01-18T19:00:03Z 2009-01-18T19:00:03Z <p>I am a dvorak typist and have unlearned qwerty. To me, dvorak did not speed up my typing at all. But I was not a fast typist to begin with anyway. Dvorak is a much more comfortable keyboard layout to use. Do I think it was worth it? Ultimately, yes. Because at one point I was really sick of the uncomfortable positions that qwerty makes your fingers go through to do some simple stuff.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/455525/is-the-switch-to-dvorak-worth-it/455798#455798 0 Answer by Growler for Is the switch to Dvorak worth it? Growler 2009-01-18T20:04:16Z 2009-01-18T20:04:16Z <p>IF you decide to change, it's worth looking at <a href="http://colemak.com/" rel="nofollow">Colemak</a> too - it's designed to plug a few gaps that Dvorak left in the ideology (right-hand heavy; I not on a home key; etc), and also to help ease the transition from Qwerty (more letters stay on the same hand as Qwerty with Colemak than with Dvorak, ZXCV all remain in the same place for shortcuts)... but of course, it's not all that well supported.</p> <p><strong>Dvorak is a good idea implemented fairly averagely, and well supported.</strong></p> <p><strong>Colemak is the same idea implemented beautifully, but not well supported.</strong></p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/455525/is-the-switch-to-dvorak-worth-it/455816#455816 1 Answer by Glomek for Is the switch to Dvorak worth it? Glomek 2009-01-18T20:16:25Z 2009-01-18T20:16:25Z <p>I think it's worth it if you primarily type prose and if you can get away with using your own computer almost all the time. Not if you primarily code or if you need to use other computers frequently. I started with Dvorak, and switched to Qwerty because languages, keyboard shortcuts, editor commands, etc. are all optimized for a Qwerty keyboard. Also, it's a pain feeling like a fish out of water whenever you're using someone else's computer.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/455525/is-the-switch-to-dvorak-worth-it/455826#455826 2 Answer by Can for Is the switch to Dvorak worth it? Can 2009-01-18T20:27:11Z 2009-01-18T20:27:11Z <p>There was an <a href="http://klausler.com/evolved.html" rel="nofollow">interesting article</a> about a stochastic optimization algorithm application to different keyboard layouts (including Dvorak) to find the best layout ever. </p> <p>The metrics for Dvorak doesn't seem to do bad though</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/455525/is-the-switch-to-dvorak-worth-it/455859#455859 1 Answer by jdangel for Is the switch to Dvorak worth it? jdangel 2009-01-18T20:49:20Z 2009-01-18T20:49:20Z <p>I taught myself to use Dvorak up to 50 wpm. I thought it would help with RSI, but it ended up putting way too much stress on my pinkies and just made my hands hurt more. I ended up just learning to touch type better with Qwerty and things got better. </p> <p>Dvorak does feel more natural in someways and is fun to mess around with, but there are some disadvantages. </p> <ul> <li>You can never share your computer with anyone</li> <li>You lose qwerty after a bit, and it becomes hard to use other computers</li> <li>You have to entirely relearn all your short cuts, because most interfaces are not keyboard layout agnostic and the only key in common between dvorak and qwerty is the <strong>M</strong>. This can be especially annoying if you use Photoshop, vim or emacs regularly. Also, it's twice as hard to copy and paste as the keys are now completely reversed. </li> <li>If you have a mac, you can overcome the layout problem by turning on a special <strong>dvorak-qwerty mode</strong> that flips back to qwerty when you press control.</li> <li>The increased stress on hands varies by person to person. You might have some problems, or you might have a beefier pinky and not notice anything.</li> </ul> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/455525/is-the-switch-to-dvorak-worth-it/455972#455972 3 Answer by Mosor for Is the switch to Dvorak worth it? Mosor 2009-01-18T21:54:39Z 2009-01-18T21:54:39Z <p>I did a bit of research over Dvorak vs. Qwerty, and here are the facts:</p> <ol> <li>there are no scientific proofs Dvorak is faster than Qwerty.</li> <li>it's lot easier to practice Qwerty and build up your typing speed than learn Dvorak, catchup to your previous Qwerty typing speed, and then try to increase your typing speed.</li> <li>if you use a lot of keyboard shortcuts (especially Vim users), you'll have to remap a lot of stuff</li> <li>arguments in favor of Dvorak don't hold much for foreign languages and/or programming</li> <li>if you switch between a lot of computers you'll still have to use Qwerty.</li> </ol> <p>To me, Dvorak sounds like a classic case of premature optimization, and when it comes to numbers, it's not even clear that it's faster than Qwerty. In conclusion, if typing is really slowing you down (ie. you type slower than, lets say... 50WPM) practice Qwerty, if you're worried about ergonomics buy a better keyboard.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/455525/is-the-switch-to-dvorak-worth-it/455977#455977 0 Answer by Niko for Is the switch to Dvorak worth it? Niko 2009-01-18T21:57:17Z 2009-01-18T21:57:17Z <p>I might have seen someone switch. Took him more than half a year to get used to the new layout. And his typing speed, after nearly a year of typing in Dvorak, is not notably faster than the speed others type in QWERTZ. </p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/455525/is-the-switch-to-dvorak-worth-it/456022#456022 0 Answer by ionn for Is the switch to Dvorak worth it? ionn 2009-01-18T22:20:39Z 2009-01-18T22:20:39Z <p>In short, no. I couldn't type noticeably faster, I have no pains from using a QWERTY keyboard, and it just caused endless confusion whenever using another computer that I couldn't easily change the layout on.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/455525/is-the-switch-to-dvorak-worth-it/458152#458152 2 Answer by Darcy Casselman for Is the switch to Dvorak worth it? Darcy Casselman 2009-01-19T16:12:35Z 2009-01-19T16:12:35Z <p>My girlfriend taught herself Dvorak (I am a lucky man, in a lot of ways), and uses it on her home machines. Since the rest of the world uses QWERTY, she gets thrown for a minute when she frequently encounters the foreign keyboard layout. The first thing she does when she sets up a new environment is try to figure out a way to set the keyboard layout. </p> <p>I've been tempted to learn once or twice, but in the end, it seems like a big hassle to me. If I was serious about the geek cred, I'd learn a <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chord_keyset" rel="nofollow">chording keyboard</a> instead.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/455525/is-the-switch-to-dvorak-worth-it/458199#458199 1 Answer by nezroy for Is the switch to Dvorak worth it? nezroy 2009-01-19T16:27:42Z 2009-01-19T16:27:42Z <p>I type at around 85WPM in QWERTY and switched to Dvorak for about a year to see if it would help with my carpal tunnel. I did not find it worth it, for most of the reasons already mentioned:</p> <ul> <li>My Dvorak typing speed did not beat my QWERTY speed.</li> <li>Braces and other common coding symbols were no easier, and made my pinkies hurt, even after a year.</li> <li>Compatibility with other people was problematic; Remote Desktop in particular had some interesting quirks when trying to switch between QWERTY and Dvorak.</li> <li>Many CLIs are setup with QWERTY in mind and I routinely found myself on environments or in apps with clumsy keyboard shortcuts from a Dvorak perspective.</li> </ul> <p>In the end, after a year of trying, dealing with Dvorak problems on a daily basis simply stopped being worth it, since there had been no appreciable gain in typing speed or reduced RSI. That said, if I ever switch from being a coder in a multi-system environment to an author working 100% on a single box writing English prose, then I would probably make the switch again. It did feel much more natural when restricted to the task of English writing.</p> <p>Luckily it only took me a few weeks to "relearn" QWERTY and get back up to speed with it.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/455525/is-the-switch-to-dvorak-worth-it/610852#610852 0 Answer by 42 for Is the switch to Dvorak worth it? 42 2009-03-04T14:36:57Z 2009-03-04T14:36:57Z <p>I <i>think</i> that my dvorak speed probably ended up near my qwerty speed. I've been typing on dvorak for about 2 years now, but I don't do a lot of straight out typing.</p> <p>yes, pinky stress is still a problem due to the {}/=\?+|-_ characters, but there is a dvorak for programmers arrangement. I have no experience with it though.</p> <p>do you really type 90 wpm as a programmer? that's like edgar stiles or chloe o'brian fast.</p> <p>speed was never my motive though. the reduction in pain and stress far out weighs any loss in speed that I may have encountered.</p> <p>and it took me about 3 months of typing nothing but dvorak before feeling comfortable.</p> <p>I say go for it!</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/455525/is-the-switch-to-dvorak-worth-it/610886#610886 3 Answer by M. Nilsson for Is the switch to Dvorak worth it? M. Nilsson 2009-03-04T14:46:21Z 2009-03-04T14:46:21Z <p>One small piece of advice from my own experience:</p> <p>Switching to Dvorak will be a pain, and frankly quite useless, if you're working as a tech, or switch workstations often. I worked a lot with users a while back (and with user workstations), and since no one had Dvorak the result was I lost speed on both setups, because I kept switching between them.</p> <p>If that's not part of <em>your</em> scenario, you can simply ignore this of course. ;)</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/455525/is-the-switch-to-dvorak-worth-it/706588#706588 2 Answer by Mork for Is the switch to Dvorak worth it? Mork 2009-04-01T17:30:06Z 2009-04-01T17:30:06Z <p>Yes, absolutely. It took me three months (after switching to Dvorak) to reach ~150WPM. I've touch-typed Qwerty before, and even after almost a decade, I only achieved ~100WPM. I did not change any other habits when I moved to Dvorak; I use the same fingers for the same keys, etc. I hadn't tried to specifically improve my typing speed other than by using it daily and doing the same things I did earlier.</p> <p>For me, though, the typing speed isn't the main benefit (I'm also a programmer); the main benefit is that it's much more comfortable to type. I can still touch-type at ~80% my old speed in Qwerty (it'd be 100% if I still used Qwerty regularly, as I did in the first few years), but it feels very awkward and uncomfortable in comparison. It's not that I type differently now, it's just that I know how much nicer it feels in Dvorak :-) (I've heard the same thing even from people who tried Dvorak but gave up after a few hours/days.)</p> <p>Other people I know have generally reported anything from minor to major gains in typing speed, but the initial learning period involves typing painfully slowly for several days.</p> <p>YMMV: Most people I've spoken to were comfortable in touch-typing Dvorak after 2-10 days with a few hours a day of typing. Using something like www.dvorak.nl for the first few days certainly is more efficient than just switching and trying to learn it the hard way. I did the latter, and it took me ~2 weeks until I felt comfortable, and a few more to reach my former typing speed.</p> <p>I've never looked back after changing, and I wholeheartedly recommend giving it a try if you have a period where you can afford typing really slowly. If you don't have time to learn it without much external pressure, I'd only recommend trying this if you're really suffering from RSI and already fixed obvious problems (keyboard height/alignment, etc.).</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/455525/is-the-switch-to-dvorak-worth-it/795542#795542 0 Answer by Michael for Is the switch to Dvorak worth it? Michael 2009-04-27T22:33:41Z 2009-04-27T22:33:41Z <p>Here's my experience with the Wide World of Dvorak. I was typing about 90 words per minute in QWERTY, but decided that wasn't enough. So, I switched last November. The first couple of weeks were painful, painful, painful. People kept asking me if I was using my cell phone to compose replies to them. I couldn't manage above 20 words per minute for about a month. However, bit by bit, ever so slowly, I've regained much of my speed back. Nowadays, I can type about 70 words a minute. Sure, this is a decrease in performance, but I know it will take years to undo my decade of QWERTY experience. The important part for me is that typing at 70 WPM has never been this comfortable.</p> <p>But you're concerned about programming, are you not? Good question. Sure, it takes a long time to re-learn my programming experience. And the fact that VI is almost unusable might be a deal-breaker for some. But it's not that bad. I think I can program about 90% of the speed I used to, and a lot more accurately than before.</p> <p>Seems to be a trade-off between speed and comfort. Are you willing to give that up? If so, Dvorak is for you. Or, are you a speed demon who wants to squeeze every ounce of speed they can from their keyboard? In that case, Dvorak probably isn't worth the switch.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/455525/is-the-switch-to-dvorak-worth-it/1025573#1025573 0 Answer by hen for Is the switch to Dvorak worth it? hen 2009-06-22T05:28:59Z 2009-06-22T05:28:59Z <p>I know this post is old but if you decide to switch to dvorak dont worry about vim compatabillity.</p> <p><a href="http://vim.wikia.com/wiki/Using_Vim_with_the_Dvorak_keyboard_layout" rel="nofollow">http://vim.wikia.com/wiki/Using_Vim_with_the_Dvorak_keyboard_layout</a></p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/455525/is-the-switch-to-dvorak-worth-it/1025598#1025598 0 Answer by Nippysaurus for Is the switch to Dvorak worth it? Nippysaurus 2009-06-22T05:39:12Z 2009-06-22T05:39:12Z <p>I am a programmer and spent quite some time trying DVORAK. Here are a few notes on my experience:</p> <ul> <li>Firstly, a graph of <a href="http://spreadsheets.google.com/pub?key=p5Bx8jxuQpfLdJPW8NodGEQ&amp;oid=2&amp;output=image" rel="nofollow">my typing speed over time</a>. Note that I do not "touch type" QWERTY, its more of a 4 or 7 finger combination of button mashes which has kinda worked for me over the years.</li> <li>Typing DVORAK at work can be extremely annoying. I have found that when using remote desktop my settings don't always carry over. Sometimes someone else would come and use my workstation and get rather annoyed about not being able to type, especially since it violates the SOE.</li> </ul> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/455525/is-the-switch-to-dvorak-worth-it/1247705#1247705 0 Answer by Paxinum for Is the switch to Dvorak worth it? Paxinum 2009-08-08T01:29:51Z 2009-08-08T01:29:51Z <p>The speed is not the best benefit, I had a summer job answering e-mails 8h/day. My hands really hurt after one month, but then I decided to switch to Dvorak, and it was a noticeable improvement. (I had used Dvorak at home for several years, so using it on the work didn't slow me down).</p> <p>I would say that it is worth a try if you have problem typing for long periods. </p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/455525/is-the-switch-to-dvorak-worth-it/1728972#1728972 0 Answer by axa for Is the switch to Dvorak worth it? axa 2009-11-13T12:35:18Z 2009-11-13T12:35:18Z <p>I have a different way of using Dvorak, and I would say it's helped a lot -- what I've wound up doing is typing in Dvorak on split keyboards and Qwerty on straight ones. The improvement with Dvorak is not so much in terms of typing speed, but in reducing RSI. I have used a split keyboard since well before I switched and while the shape helps, I find that Dvorak helps more. The problem I had at first was that all the other machines were set up with Qwerty -- especially a problem for shared testing machines, which I had to use a lot but where people complained if I remapped the keyboard.</p> <p>As the only computers with split keyboards that I use regularly are my own, the arrangement of layout to keyboard shape matches up very nearly 100%.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/455525/is-the-switch-to-dvorak-worth-it/1757731#1757731 0 Answer by Brad for Is the switch to Dvorak worth it? Brad 2009-11-18T17:33:50Z 2009-11-18T17:33:50Z <p>I like how people on this thread brag about being touch typists when the qwerty keyboard exhibits an inferior arrangement of letters and typically little or no concession to ergonomics. We should all be exploring better options for typing when many people spend a large part of their work-day doing it. I'm personally open to the Dvorak style even though I haven't tried it. I also type 75+ WPM without using a "home-row" or any other traditional mechanism of "touch-typists." That being said, I'm happy with my typing even if I have to occasionally look at my keyboard. I'd much rather have that problem than all of the carpal-tunnel and arthritis issues you touch typists will be having. Good luck with that.</p>