Posts Tagged ‘Dvorak’

Adventures in Dvorak

Posted in Personal Projects on June 30th, 2009 by Danny F. Santos – Comments

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Creative Commons License photo credit: zappowbang

The Dvorak keyboard, one of those weird ideas that makes sense but no one in their right mind will learn. I mean, we have a layout that’s been used for a really long time, that’s a difficult habit to break! Well, let me just say this: I’m typing this in Dvorak, and I love it.

Yes, that weird layout is what I happily type in. In fact, I not only type faster in Dvorak than in QWERTY, which is kind of the point, but I find it a lot more comfortable as well.

Why Dvorak?
I’m lazy. I really don’t like doing something the “right” way if I can do it faster the wrong way. QWERTY is what I learned in school but they layout never quite worked for me so I looked into what people were using as an alternative and found Dvorak.

There’s a history behind the QWERTY layout and Dvorak layout that I really don’t want to go into, so I’ll sum it up: qwerty’s layout is random and Dvorak is based on which letters are used most for the home keys. I mean, no one thinks having the semi-colon on the home row is brilliant.  Ah, that useful semi-colon, comes in handy all the time!

How to start using Dvorak
This may come as a shock, but just start using it. Every source I’ve read says you can pick it up in a few weeks, it took me several months which leads me to conclude that I’m dumb and stubborn.  Go me.

I started with stickers on my keys but that didn’t work too well, the stickers had a habit of coming off. The reason I didn’t just pop the keys out and switch them was because the keys are not all the same shape, it was like typing on a keyboard that needed dental work.

After fighting with the stickers until I had a quasi-reasonable grasp of where the keys are, I then kept an image of the layout as a desktop background. If I ever forgot where a key was, I’d check the desktop. Throughout this, I kept doing typing exercises until I just remembered where all the keys were.

Do I ever use QWERTY?
Have to.  The login page for my iMac is set to qwerty and I haven’t the foggiest clue how to set it to dvorak.  To this day it drives me bonkers.

To make a long post short, I highly recommend switching to Dvorak if your wrists hurt and you want to start typing like you did when you first were allowed near a keyboard!



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