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ArcticMyst Security by Avery

What type of keyboard?

What type of keyboard do you use?

  • QWERTY, I like to slow down and think about what I'm saying

    Votes: 27 64.3%
  • DVORAK, MEEP MEEP!

    Votes: 6 14.3%
  • QWERTZ, weinersnitchel

    Votes: 3 7.1%
  • AZERTY, I'm french.

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Voice recognition FTW!

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • i tipe den stuf goez on screne

    Votes: 6 14.3%

  • Total voters
    42





Joined
Dec 23, 2008
Messages
3,948
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63
this has been discussed already. but what is "insane" speeds to you? i'm at about 45-50 words a min on qwerty. from what i read it isn't worth learning a new system. also if you are going to learn something new why not go all the way and learn a steno machine and get up to 200-300 wpm.

michael
 

Ash

0
Joined
Mar 3, 2009
Messages
1,981
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0
QWERTY. Specifically:
Alienware Tact X. Can be changed to whatever colors, in two zones:
0,1425,sz=1&i=212240,00.jpg
Alienware-TactX-Keyboard.jpg
 
Joined
May 11, 2010
Messages
142
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0
Sorry for making another thread about the same thing :(. 80-100 is insane for me.
 
Joined
Dec 23, 2008
Messages
3,948
Points
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Are you reaching those speeds? as far as i am aware, dvorak doesn't enable you to type faster, it is about ergonomics and fatigue.


michael
 
Joined
May 11, 2010
Messages
142
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0
Yep, I type about 30WPM faster than I did before. You should try it and see! I takes a bit to get used to. But this helped a lot: Dvorak keyboard training - experimental

EDIT: The reason they made QWERTY was that people were typing too fast on typewriters and they were jamming too much.
 
Joined
Nov 22, 2008
Messages
1,506
Points
48
Dvorak was once installed on my phone's on-screen keyboard, and I found it was more comfortable, but I upgraded firmware and initially broke it, and haven't fixed since. I might do that now actually. My desktop and laptops all use qwerty, and it's fast enough for what I do, so I see no reason not to stick to it.
 
Joined
Jan 20, 2008
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1,724
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Dvorak on an IBM Model M.

Been using dvorak for ten years or so now... Using QWERTY for more than an hour or two a day hurts my wrists.

I can type 60+wpm in dvorak, upwards of 80 with caffeine. I get around 30-40wpm in QWERTY on a good day. I think the main difference is that I never learned touch typing on QWERTY -- I use a ninja-hunt-and-peck method, whereas in dvorak, you're pretty much forced to use a proper touch-typing method.

I've thought about learning colemak, I hear it's a lot faster and easier on the hands than even dvorak, but I haven't had the time to play around with it yet. A lot of the speed improvement of colemak is that the capslock key becomes backspace, so no reaching with your pinkie then finding home row again when you make mistakes.
 

cmak

0
Joined
Jan 12, 2010
Messages
716
Points
28
Yep, I type about 30WPM faster than I did before. You should try it and see! I takes a bit to get used to. But this helped a lot: Dvorak keyboard training - experimental

EDIT: The reason they made QWERTY was that people were typing too fast on typewriters and they were jamming too much.

Damn you for posting that link... I type upwards of 80wpm on a QWERTY, and after doing that DVORAK lesson halfway, I suck at QWERTY typing all of a sudden! :mad:

Oh well, it was worth a try :p

-Chris
 

dnar

0
Joined
Jun 7, 2010
Messages
608
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0
I use simplified DVORAK, because you can type at insane speeds.

Dvorak Simplified Keyboard - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

LOL, sadist.

One of my favorite office pranks is to switch the keys for users that can't touch type (hunt and peck typers). I swap M & N, 0 & O, I & L. Gets them every time.

My other pranks are to rotate the Windows display by 180 degrees, or capture a users screen and save it as their background. :eg:

BTW, QUERTY was layed out in the 1800's to avoid type writer bars from jamming. Remmington picked up the patent pretty soon after. The irony is we don't have such jamming issues any longer yet the QUERTY layout is defacto. DEVORAK is much better for speed typing, once you overcome the brain/hand un-learning...
 
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dnar

0
Joined
Jun 7, 2010
Messages
608
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Dvorak on an IBM Model M.

I have a number of old Model M keyboards at home and in the office, they bloody rock. The key spacing and action is awesome. You can hear if you mis-typed.

They are loud however. My fellow engineers can tell when someone has pissed me off, by the machine gun fire of my keyboard!
 
Joined
Jan 26, 2010
Messages
573
Points
18
@Ash: I assume you are using a Alienware desktop?

I am on a QWERTY using Alienware M15x built in keyboard with 4 customizable zones.:na:

This is my current customization of the 10 zones plus mouse.(not pictured, it's blue.)

Capture-2.jpg


The two outsides being blue and the inner two being lighter gives it a cool bleed effect.
 
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aXit

0
Joined
Sep 15, 2009
Messages
206
Points
0
Surprising amount of Dvorak here.

I switched about a year ago, my wrists have loved me ever since.

I use a custom layout, those who use dvorak will understand my changes:

QJKX all shifted left one space, and the ; moved to the middle. It helps keep the hands at the right slope. For example all the keys I need to press with my left middle finger look like / rather than <.

U and I swapped. I is much more common in modern english, so it's better as a home key.

I don't think I'll ever change from Dvorak. I can still type QWERTY, just not as fast as I used to.

Now I just need to get my hands on one of those model M's. They're a bitch to find in Australia.
 

cmak

0
Joined
Jan 12, 2010
Messages
716
Points
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I don't think I'll ever change from Dvorak. I can still type QWERTY, just not as fast as I used to.
I am strongly considering switching to Dvorak now, but this was the last major concern that I had (e.g. Needing to type something real quick on a QWERTY keyboard and looking like an idiot that can barely type :p). Do you really retain the ability to "switch" back and forth between both? How long did it take you to make the switch, and has your Qwerty been getting progressively worse since you stopped using it?

Hope you don't mind my bombardment of questions, I'm just quite curious to hear from someone with actual specific experience involving the big switch.

-Chris
 




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