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- Xref: sparky comp.misc:4783 general:407
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- Path: sparky!uunet!noc.near.net!oz.plymouth.edu!sos
- From: sos@oz.plymouth.edu (Steffan O'Sullivan)
- Subject: Re: DVORAK keyboard?
- Message-ID: <1993Jan6.222608.20598@oz.plymouth.edu>
- Organization: Plymouth State College - Plymouth, NH.
- References: <1if0scINN6k2@uwm.edu> <1if7duINN2ho@gallium.cs.unc.edu> <1993Jan06.195807.4211@i88.isc.com>
- Date: Wed, 6 Jan 93 22:26:08 GMT
- Lines: 27
-
- jeq@i88.isc.com (Jonathan E. Quist) writes:
- >In article <1if7duINN2ho@gallium.cs.unc.edu> harris@cs.unc.edu (Trey Harris) writes:
- >
- >BZZT! Urban Legend Alert. The querty keyboard was _not_ designed
- >to slow typists, it was designed to avoid jamming the typewriter.
- >Typewriters don't jam because the typist is too fast (unless the typist
- >presses one key before releasing another, which good typists didn't
- >do on mechanical typewriters) - they jam when a rapid sequence of keystrokes
- >activates hammers that are physically close together in the machine, wedging
- >them together. To keep the mechanism as simple as possible, the hammers
- >were in the same sequence as the horizontal sequence of the keys. The
- >querty keyboard was designed so that common keystroke sequences, _not_
- >commonly used keys, were widely distributed.
-
- Urban legend or not, it makes more sense than your reply. LOOK at the
- QWERTY layout: "e" and "r" right next to each other, "e" and "d" right
- next to each other, "e" and "s" right next to each other - these are
- common, VERY common key sequences. Your answer does not make sense.
- Look at how many "es" "er" "ed" combos are in this post alone. . .
-
- And, yes, I'm a devoted Dvorak user, and I've read Dvorak's book on the
- psychology of typing. The major disad is when I'm at a machine that I
- can't load software to reprogram the keys - otherwise, there are no
- disadvantages.
-
- --
- - Steffan O'Sullivan sos@oz.plymouth.edu
-