I'm really curious to see how many people here are Dvorak users.
(I'll be surprised if anyone says #4 )
What's that?
No.
No, but I'd like to learn.
A little, but I primarily use the QWERTY.
Yes, but I still use the QWERTY on occasion/at work.
Yes, I can't even use the QWERTY smoothly anymore.
I'm really curious to see how many people here are Dvorak users.
(I'll be surprised if anyone says #4 )
Last edited by Yarin; 09-17-2010 at 12:25 PM.
I'm under the impression that the time saved from using a Dvorak keyboard at home would be offset by the amount of time I'd need to waste shopping around and ultimately applying those dumb little stickies to my keyboards. If there were more good keyboards being designed around the Dvorak layout that I could just go out and buy and be done with it, I'd consider the change. I just don't like the idea of having to reapply my own layout over a QWERTY layout every time I switch keyboards (which is quite frequent).
Last edited by SlyMaelstrom; 09-17-2010 at 02:27 PM.
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My brother spent an afternoon physically popping the keys off his keyboard and putting them in their new locations.
Just to ........ people off, he made a few keys different from true Dvorak, just to put a damper on the egos of other Dvorak users when they sat down at his terminal. "Oh, you use Dvorak too? I bet I can type faster than you. Hey... Uh... wait a minute."
Code://try //{ if (a) do { f( b); } while(1); else do { f(!b); } while(1); //}
Yeah, I'd definitely prefer transparent stickies to physically adjusting the keyboard. In fact, the only way I would purchase a keyboard with the Dvorak layout would be if it also included the QWERTY equivalent on every key. I don't like the idea of having a keyboard that any one of my friends and family would feel uncomfortable using should they need to. For me it'd have to be a Dvorak/QWERTY keyboard with a simple toggle between the two either on the keyboard itself or in some sort of tray in the operating system.
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I know several people who don't bother changing the physical keyboard. They just touch-type on a qwerty keyboard in a dvorak or a Hebrew keyboard layout. KDE has it set up very nicely; you can have an icon in your systray which you click once on to toggle layouts. I have it down there but I don't know how to use a dvorak keyboard at all. I type pretty fast as it is on a qwerty keyboard, and I like being able to use public computers/other peoples' laptops/etc without switching my brain between layouts.
dwk
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Yeah, that and having to remap keys on all my video games (Googles dvorak layout) ,AOE to move? That doesn't have the same ring as WASD. On the other hand, having a dvorak keyboard would make "QWERTYUIOP" a slightly better password .I'm under the impression that the time saved from using a Dvorak keyboard at home would be offset by the amount of time I'd need to waste shopping around and ultimately applying those dumb little stickies to my keyboards.
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That's what I did. And as far as those little stickies... because I now know it, I (like dwks was saying) can even just change the layout on the OS (when on a system that's not mine) and continue using the same QWERTY keyboard, without too much trouble, then just change it back when I'm done (or not ). So really, the lack of cheap Dvorak keyboards shouldn't be a problem.
Wouldn't he have had to compensate for the difference keys on the OS too? Seems like a lot of work for the fun, and alot more confusion when you go to use the real thing.
Last edited by Yarin; 09-17-2010 at 06:09 PM.
What we really need is keyboards with LED-like keys that remap the whole layout from a preferences screen, without the need for key flipping or stickies. Users of international keyboards would be especially grateful. There's also this, but I couldn't possibly bear to use it: Laser-projected keyboard image - Photos: Kaiser's high-tech health care - CNET News
As for Dvorak...
I used it indeed. For just short of a couple of years. Inexplicably, after actually getting used to it, I put it aside. Have been stashed away since the beginning of this year.
I bought a simplified Dvorak for the geek factor, because I believed in the hype for speed and accuracy of typing and because it indeed solved one of the banes of most QWERTY layouts; bad access to many of the symbols associated with programming -- an area where I do believe the Dvorak layout excels. However, because I'm not a touch typist, I never actually benefited from the advertised increase in speed or accuracy.
I was however happy to confirm that indeed learning a vastly different keyboard layout is possible in a relatively short time, without sacrificing your muscle-memory of your older layout. One really just needs to hang on for the initial impact and get over it. It is also somewhat easy to imprint the new keyboard layout in your memory, meaning I'm very confident that today, 9 months later (take it or leave it) I could go fetch the dvorak and type in it as easily as I'm typing this on a qwerty. But I suspect there should be a short limit to the number of layouts we are capable of assimilating.
Incidentally, keyboard layouts is one area that always instills some curiosity on me, for some reason. I just like it, despite agreeing that this is (except for the very best touch-typists among us) a largely useless area of interest. One layout that I'm growing a keen interest on is Neo. There's very nice things I hear about it occasionally. And the principles behind this type of keyboard seem a lot more sound than just the swapping of keys of every other layout (this one you can't use stickies).
Originally Posted by brewbuck:
Reimplementing a large system in another language to get a 25% performance boost is nonsense. It would be cheaper to just get a computer which is 25% faster.
I can touchtype drunk with my eyes closed and a tight noose around my neck... but that's with a QWERTY keyboard... I don't suppose you learned Dvorak through touch typing. So I have no intention to... the entire reason that Dvorak didn't take over was because large industry didn't feel it cost effective to retrain all of their typists. It's time consuming and, at the end of the day, not worth the effort. Brewbuck outlined the perfect example of a Dvorak user in his description of his brother... it's just a bunch of people attempting to create an image of elitism amongst their peers. Dvorak keyboard users are the Hummer owners of the computer world.
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I feel that the biggest gain for Dvorak is for touch typing, and then mainly from an ergonomic standpoint. To me a layout based on frequency of use makes alot of sense. I also like the separation of vowel and consonants but for programming I find the US qwerty better.
I made some attempt to learn it a while back but the fact that all other keyboards use qwerty made me reconsider. That and the fact that you are painfully slow in the beginning.
Last edited by Subsonics; 09-17-2010 at 07:50 PM.
Sure, it's difficult to start learning that way. My solution was to rearrange the keys out on a $5 KB - not too painful there.
And I fully understand why it's not more popular.
As far as the elitism though... I started cause I saw an article on it, found it interesting, and realized that, hey, I'm young, I'm sure I'll do a lot more typing within my remaining life. Why learn this? Sure, it'd be hard at first, but the logic behind the layout convinced me that it'd be worth it. And so far, I think it has. But I'm by no means an elitist though, I don't see myself moving on to being the KeyB0ard G0d, or even a faster typist (though possibly a little bit in the future, nothing significant), the only reason I prefer it is because it's more comfortable.
Kind of like, not all Linux users, are elitists.
You mean this. Except it costs a small fortune and I can't seem to understand why.What we really need is keyboards with LED-like keys that remap the whole layout from a preferences screen, without the need for key flipping or stickies.
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2500 / 113 = 22I can't seem to understand why.
I don't know. $22 for each key doesn't seem so bad.
Soma