You ask specifically about developers, so the results would differ marketly markedly from a general user base. One key thing to remember is that whenever an experienced person has to take his havds hands off the keyboard (for whatever reason), it slows him/her down and takes far more time than a corrisponding corresponding keystroke.
This is true for a mouse, trackball or whatever. A programmer who is typing into a code window can generally use a keyboard accelerator much faster than taking his hand over to the mouse to right click, ; the same should hold true for a touchscreen.
Servers in a restaurant have a much different environment. Rarely, if ever, are they typing extended amounts of "text: text" into an editor. They are hunting and pecking at big buttons on a touchsreen touchscreen while standing up.
The one type of developer who I believe could absolutely benefit from a multi-touch screen would be a UI/UX designer building rich user interfaces.
