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We've had this question already, but I want to narrow it down to already high-speed typists.

The original poster had hit a barrier of 75 WPM and wanted to increase his speed. I'm at a barrier where I can reliably type around 130, and I can sometimes hit 150, probably depending on the distribution of words in the text.

I feel that methods to increase speed from this high end to higher might be different than going from 30 to 60, or even 75 to 100. Anybody have any suggestions?

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You need to start looking at the hardware... Try out different keyboards to get the best reactionary keyboard to your typing method. I find myself typing much faster on some keyboards even though they are identically sized with identical features...the key response times are slight different.

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this is what i was thinking myself. can you post your keyboard model here stackoverflow.com/questions/288856/… ? – Claudiu Nov 14 '08 at 0:35
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If you're trying to learn how to type your favorite language faster, may I suggest that you learn a better language?

When I typed dictation a lifetime ago, I could type over 120wpm on a dictaphone. When I type C I rarely exceed 90wpm, but when I write lisp, I don't even reach 50wpm.

The time you're spending typing isn't being spent thinking.

If you're trying to learn how to type copy more quickly, learning to read more quickly can help. I had great success using rapid serial visual presentation to increase my reading speed.

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great suggestions. i think my reading is all set - i often consciously look ahead while i'm typing. my main issue isn't type copy, it's "type when I know what I want" speed. even in lisp - you think for a while, then you type your function in. time spent typing could be better spent th inking. – Claudiu Nov 14 '08 at 1:21
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Switching to a Dvorak keyboard layout is supposed to increase your speed. The obvious downside is you have to retrain yourself to type. A friend of mine did this and he says it took 3 weeks until he was faster than with a Qwerty keyboard.

Here are instructions for setting up a Dvorak layout in Windows XP, Ubuntu, and Mac OS X.

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i have actually learned Dvorak, but I got stuck around 80 wpm. i kept with it for a few weeks, but i was so much faster at qwerty when i switched back that i stayed switched. dvorak has a lot of key combos that dont make sense, like sl being next to each other – Claudiu Nov 14 '08 at 0:49
Key placement is based on English letter and digraph frequency. I haven't tried it either, though, because I use so many different computers and I know going back and forth won't work. – Bill the Lizard Nov 14 '08 at 0:55
i thought it was too, which is why it surprsied me that s and l are next to each other. also 'gh' (ghastly, ghost). it's also hard for me to hit the lower-right keys (m,./ on QWERTY), but that might be from lack of practice – Claudiu Nov 14 '08 at 1:23

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