I am learning Dvorak for about 1 month now and my typing speed 35-45 wpm. Actually, it could be better if English were my first language. What about your results in one month?
I am going to get dvorak stickers and train with dvorak.nl After shipping and training I will try to remember to come back here and post how long it took me
I always thought the Chicago Typewriter, which got that moniker during Prohibition, was named after normal typewriters. I guess it was the other way around!
This is the most proper video about Dvorak keyboard I've watched on RUclips. I switched to Dvorak a few years ago and I am using it to type this comment. It took me about a month to learn... or a month and a half? I couldn't remember precisely. I can still switch to Qwerty if necessary, just need to stare at the keyboard whereas I just remember all the keys on Dvorak. In my opinion, Dvorak does not necessary make you type faster, but it sure makes your typing experience a lot more comfortable. I used to have a sore pinky because of overuse of computer (and that leads to me to try Dvorak). Now with my typing mostly done on the middle row and sometimes on the top, I barely need to move my wrist and that allows me to rest both my hands on the same position comfortably. Does it make me type faster? I don't know. But I am certainly a happier computer user.
Learned dvorak years ago. It is legitimately great and does feel like almost lazy typing for how much easier typing is. I wouldn't say that i really type faster (though i did test is years back and I certainly do) but more that It just feels better physically. It was not easy to learn or get used to, but once I did, it was great. I do swap back and forth sometimes when I need to type in passwords, but it is pretty easy to just attach switching between keyboard formats to a hotkey and voila. It can be set up in virtually any system in seconds. For me, it is great. (A lot of games can actually recognize that it is dvorak and switch automatically and for those that dont, it doesnt take that long, or I just hotkey back to qwerty.)
I'm a Dvorak user, and would never look back now. I tried switching to Dvorak quite a while ago and failed once, because I gave myself the option of switching back to QWERTY with a single keystroke, which basically meant that I did that all the time. The second time I tried to swap, I just rearranged my keys, switched the settings in the OS, actually removed QWERTY and didn't give myself the option of switching back. I also taught myself to touch type at the same time as this was something I never did on a QWERTY keyboard. For a short while after mostly learning where the keys were in Dvorak and briefly doing some typing exercises to teach me the layout, I switched to blank keycaps while I made the transition. I've switched back now though and use a Filco mechanical keyboard (Cherry MX Blue) with a custom laser etched keycap set with the right layout on it. It was pretty frustrating at first, but after a while I became pretty proficient at it, though making the occasional typo by pressing the wrong key (I was still using QWERTY at work so I wasn't totally useless there!). After a while, when I became 'good enough' at Dvorak, I dropped QWERTY entirely and switched at work too, and my speed just improved from there. I can no longer use a QWERTY keyboard, the muscle memory has completely gone, but this is a total non-issue for me - everything I use (smart phone, keyboards etc) is set to Dvorak now, and I rarely need to use other people's computers. When I do though, it's not a major issue, I'm just a lot slower than normal! Definitely wouldn't switch back though, you can just feel that Dvorak is a superior layout, and how little your fingers move compared to before, with loads of typing done on the home row.
2 weeks, though I never learned to touch type properly with QWERTY to begin with. I didn't change my keycaps around, which (while slowing me down significantly) helped a lot since I couldn't rely on looking at the keyboard as a backup and resorting to hunt'n'peck. I kept a cheat sheet taped to the wall by my monitor when I was slipping up, and I completely committed to the task instead of switching back to QWERTY just because I "had to get something done NOW". If you've had muscle memory developed for QWERTY it will probably take longer, but 10 years later I'm happily typing at a cool 100WPM on average and without the RSI that runs in my family.
I use the German Dvorak Typ II for about 3 years now. I can't say it made me much faster at typing. The biggest thing slowing me down when writing is phrasing out what I am writing anyay. I do seem to be around 5-10% faster when copying text from screen. The big difference I feel is that my hands stay very much relaxed even after longer writing sessions. I do still use QWERTZ though. At work, because I can't make these changes, working on many different machines. At home I do sometimes still switch back, because some of the long complex passwords I use in variations over years are stored in movement in my brain and it would just take too much effort to always learn them in both layouts. I do tell you though, that Dvorak really can be a pain when you are a gamer. Some games are great in simply adapting the bindings to the exact same spot on your keyboard, thus bewaring the actualy layout the game creators intended, but many (all Valve games for example) do not, but the actual character behind it. Switching the layout in game often doesnt help. You have to quit the game and start it with the correct layout set before. I can write blindly on Dvorak and QWERTZ but what I can not do on Dvorak is to blindly tap a single random charackter with one finger. I can only use it when my hands are put on the orientation nobs on F and J. I only use Dvorak in Software so finding a particular key directly has never been part of my training. I use computers pretty much since I am born Shortcuts are also still an issue, because you often need both hands. If you copy paste a lot using your mouse in between that's horrible, but as somebody who is quick with navigating by keyboard alone, thats not a big problem.
Due to this video two years ago I switched my phone's keyboard to Dvorak, just for fun, I actually really like it. But now I forgot how to type on Qwerty and no one else can type on my phone.
Not to be a Debbie downer, but Dvorak makes very limited sense on a phone/ any thumb based keyboard, unless it's what you type on the desktop so to maintain familiarty. Most of the advantages of the layout are nullified by thumb typing on a handheld device.
I briefly tried years ago to adjust to it, but I quickly gave up because even if I got used to it at home, every other device would still be QWERTY so it would have been too annoying to switch for little gain.
If you have a work computer with a GUI (unless it's a custom interface that doesn't let you switch to other windows) that you log into your own account on, the keyboard layout is per account if you modify it. Unfortunately you'll still see the same layout on the physical keyboard. You'll just have to go by memory and avoid viewing it.
Dvorak user here since about, oh, 1986 I think. It's not just about speed. For me it's about reducing pain from RSI. I first switched because I had read an article and wanted to see for myself what the difference was. So I wrote a TSR program to remap my keys. Ironically, I never got around to doing a speed test, neither before nor after.
Yes, comfort is the main reason to use Dvorak. It feels so much easier. Also the nerd factor is nice. The looks I get when people try typing on my keyboard... 🤣 But I wouldn't pick Dvorak if I was starting today. There's even better layouts like colemak or workman and support for these is a lot better than it was 20 years ago. Dvorak is kinda like vim: It's available on almost every system.
I started practicing Dvorak some weeks ago and, man, I am in love. Since then, everytime I use a QWERTY layout for about five minutes makes me uncomfortable, and that's because Qwerty forced me to make unnecessary movement that my hands were free from. My speed, from 70 wpm (in Qwerty) dropped to 30, 39, after the first week of practice. Also. The majority of games that are keyboard compatible are not affected by the keyboard layout you are currently using. Using Dvorak and playing a silly game, like Roblox, is not different than the normal.
I've been typing on DV for about a year now. It took me a couple months to be proficient. The hardest part about learning is that in order to do it effectively, you need to go completely cold turkey from QWERTY. No switching back just to "write a quick email." It's almost like learning a new language; it's only going to stick if you fully immerse yourself. I also found that, while learning, I unlearned a lot of bad habits I picked up while learning QWERTY, like looking at my hands while typing. Most people learn to type now when they are very young. Paying attention in typing class was not my top priority in high school, and I would cheat and look at my hands. It all felt so forced. When you are learning a keyboard layout because you want to, you put a lot more effort into it and learn it the right way. Not to mention, DV is definitely easier for touch typing because you don't have to move your hands / reach when typing most words.
@@rozemo7953 It's better in general but it doesn't mean you need to use it to become a better typist. I'd give Dvorak or, better yet, Colemak or a variation of Colemak a try.
I made the switch in 2012 (having been a touch-typist in QWERTY since 1984) based on a number of accounts of Dvorak being easier on the wrists. It was super frustrating to drop from 80+ wpm down to about 20, and it took months of drills to build back up (my speed since then has varied from 70-90, which is acceptable to me). Yeah, it sucked. But it was well worth it. I don't regret the switch at all. I used to end every workday with sore wrists from all the twister-style typing on QWERTY. That is now just a distant memory.
I don't think its a misconception at all. Typewriter jamming was caused by "typing too quickly" as stated at around 0:18. By placing the most commonly used letters far away, that effectively slows the typing down so that there are less jams. The point is that it slows down the typing; yes, I understand that the typing process included jams and therefore the less jams, the less time the overall process of typing takes. I'm mainly focusing on the point that the actual typing portion was slowed down purposefully. Not a misconception.
doe maeries Xyos212 Except there is nothing wrong with the Qwerty layout, whereas windows is a mess compared to most Linux distros and the only reason it's still used is that pretty much anything is made to work with Windows, and OS X and Linux are an afterthought.
I switched to Dvorak a couple years ago. It was difficult, but I think it was worth it. I was able to learn true touch-typing (which I probably couldn't do in QWERTY, because I would need to unlearn bad habits I'd developed over the years). Most of the speed improvement probably came from being able to touch-type, but I am sure Dvorak's better layout helped too. The main benefit, however, isn't the speed ... it's the comfort. My hands feel much better after a day using the Dvorak keyboard. (I still use a "QWERTY" keyborad, but on a computer with Windows set to receive the input as Dvorak. And I can switch between Dvorak and QWERTY with a keyboard shortcut.)
i have been using the Dvorak for over a year now on my touchscreen smartphone and am extremely satisfied. despite what is said in this video, it took me no more than 2 weeks to master it. my typing on the phone is now lightning fast, using both thumbs or even just one. what i am particularly looking forward to is the one-hand variant of the Dvorak (either left or right) to use on the tablet (which i dont own yet). as for the issue of alternative languages, i have the Croatian dictionary installed which i use parallel to English at the same time, mostly using autocorrect to insert special characters or just ignoring them altogether (c instead of č etc). HERE'S AN INTERESTING POINT: as much as i type insanely fast on the touchscreen Dvorak and on the hardware QWERTY - with no trouble switching instantly from my phone dvorak to my desktop qwerty - when i accidentally turn on the qwerty on my phone i am completely lost and struggle to find each of the letters, like a granny. so much for the claim that, psychologically, the medium is unimportant. :D
Both Dvorak and Querty were developed using the english language in mind. For those who have to write in other languages, this debate is useless. BTW, X and Q are used a lot in portuguese.
Dvorak can be easily used to type in Portuguese. I do it all the time and I find that with Dvorak one keeps their fingers on the home row most of the time in Portuguese just like in English.
I was forced to change keyboard layouts due to RSI. It took me about a week to be able to type blind at a decent enough speed. About a month or two to surpass my old qwerty speed. I did it by printing out a Dvorak layout image and placing it besides the computer. Then I opened a text editor (any will do) and grabbed a towel. Placed the towel over my hands and started copying some texts. Look at the printout to find the key you need to type, and then type it. Learning the new layout went very fast. Also, most games nowadays actually use the hardware key codes and don't care one way or another what layout you've selected. Older games might need a bit of settings screen duty. 😏
Using a DVORAK since 2009, when I bought my first Mac (I wanted to use a DVORAK keyboard for quite a time... a new computer/OS was my motivation: 'lets make it all weird at the same time'), and I moved the keycaps. I currently use an Apple Wireless Keyboard also with keycaps moved to Dvorak layout. I don't know if today I am faster than I was with QWERTY, but less finger 'traveling' is more comfortable and less painful. I am a fan.
You have an iPad Mac doesn't support DVORAK, you cannot use a DVORAK keyboard on a Mac. If you switch the keycaps around it will still be QWERTY just with mislabeled keys.
Hi 0M9H4X, I honestly don't know why you wrote this... because I am typing right now on a Mac with a DVORAK keyboard that was previously qwerty. You just open "System Preferences" > Keyboard > Input Sources and add a DVORAK layout (no additional programs, everything you need already comes in your OS X).
0M9H4X lol You dumbass. He even said in the video that you can switch to Dvorak on OSX. Someone doesn't know how to pay attention. That is probably a reason you failed to graduate from high school. But, don't worry we need those experienced Mcdonalds employees in the world to make my cheeseburger and fries when my cook is out sick.
0M9H4X No, he says (2m47s): "and most operating systems, except iOS, have built-in support for DVORAK keyboards". iOS = iPhone / iPad... OS X = Mac (and, come on, I said I use it on the Mac...) Also, notice the word "built-in support". You could always install 3rd party drivers/programs. The new iOS allows you to install 3rd-party apps with Keyboard layouts (no more jailbreak) - so, now even on iOS/iPhone you can have a DVORAK keyboard layout. Anyway, you would already know all of this if you were truly interested in experimenting different keyboard layouts. :)
i switch between keyboard layouts. when i remember to practice dvorak! i type over 100wpm on qwerty and only 40wpm in dvorak. in the past i stuck at it a while and speed in dvorak comes up pretty fast ... 60-80wpm fairly easily. however, i did it to see if it's possible or even *easy* to maintain and switch between layouts. IT IS!! Learn dvorak layout. I figure it can only help your cognitive ability.
4 seconds in and I had to stop the video cause that didn't sound correct at all. 1860's is more correct. Makes me wonder what else is wrong with the information.
I'm writing this with a DVORAK keyboard without using the prediction function and I hate myself already. I wish I improve at a motivating rate, as I'll have to overcome more than ten years of experience with a QWERTY keyboard, I learnt to type proficiently when I was 14... Almost 7 minutes to type this.
I'm writing this with a DVORAK keyboard without using the prediction function and I hate myself already. I wish I improve at a motivating rate, as I'll have to overcome more than ten years of experience with QWERTY keyboard. I learnt to type proficiently when I was 14... Almost 7 minutes to type this. Took me 20 seconds with QWERTY, man has muscle-memory become so important. It took me 3 seconds to properly type in QWERTY because I've never wrote that word enough for it to be natural, fluent. However seeing as I'm fluent with the QWERTY keyboard and that all of these words are just muscle memory, it's rather simple. Sucks for you, who cares if technically DVORAK is more efficient.
I stopped with this challenge 3 days after I started. I thought it could be a great way to develop brain plasticity, but my efficiency was really low, it was hindering my communications.
Faster? Unknown. Better? Absolutely Dvorak. I switched because I had to type quickly for a job and QWERTY was murdering my fingers and wrists. QWERTY is ubiquitous, but it's really worth the time to learn it if you plan on typing or using a computer a lot. It takes around a month or two to really get the hang of it from QWERTY, but your hands will thank you.
I'm a Dvorak typist and I really like the layout. That being said... If you're a decent QWERTY typist, don't switch to Dvorak for speed. You won't be that much faster. The best reason to switch is to help with wrist strain if you do a lot of typing and your wrists are bothering you... everything moves much less while you're typing, so it really does help.
This is it. Dvorak is much more comfortable than QWERTY. It's all about the comfort. 70% of what you type is on the home row. But it's always important to say: it takes a long time and a lot of effort to learn a second keyboard layout. On the 3rd day you want to give up. You cannot do this when you have papers to deliver!
I never got why QWERTY put the a on the left pinky finger (the weakest finger on the weaker hand), on a typewriter where the keys are much harder to press down it leads to a lot of faint or missed A's for me. And now I noticed it's in same place for Dvorak too.. WTF
+Some Weeb Because it's a pain doing that for each and every single game. What I do is this: my OS's keyboard layout is set to US English and I have two keyboards, one of which is just for typing, is ergonomic and therefore awkward for gaming anyway and does Dvorak to qwerty translation in hardware while the other is the gaming keyboard and does no translation. Boom, best of both worlds.
Some Weeb Sure, to each his own. Some games do suck ass though or at least the PC port does. Might still be worth playing. Also a favorite among bad ports is when you _can_ remap the keys but it will still show the unmapped key on screen in tutorials or God forbid QTEs.
Breaking News, Some kid from Michigan hacked 1.6 Billion Facebook accounts and then proceeded to change their name to Im Dumb For Setting My Password To QWERTY
Mid 1980’s, after 2 semesters of Qwerty, I could then start typing my own college papers. It didn’t take long before my hands ached. Fed up, I bought a used keyboard and crudely sawed it half, connected them, via flexible tether, and adjusted them to how my hands naturally rested - at a slight angle. Researching this approach, I came across an article on Dvorak, which intrigued me “w/a level of proficiency within 20-30 hours.” Having access to a Mac, Mavis Beacon Teaches Typing offered software for a host of keyboard layouts with clear labels for the keys. My plan was, before doing any work, 30 to 45 minutes was dedicated to Dvorak. The roommate thought I was crazy. I thought I was set free. Then, imagine my excitement with the intro of Mac’s split keyboard and a 10 key could plug into either the right or left side. Brilliant! Fast forward to today, whether it’s the ergo keyboard or the more compact laptop, I have never had hand strain w/Dvorak.
I would only use Dvorak if I was a hipster Just so I can say things like "Well yeah I use a keyboard, but it has this obscure layout that you probably never heard of before"
***** Because most things are designed with QWERTY in mind, you can change between the two or rebind but that's not exactly practical + if you learn DVORAK and go to use pretty much any other keypad (computer or otherwise) it'll most likely be QWERTY.
***** SUrreee it wasn't written on a QWERTY... Anywho... what I wrote was a joke, it works because if you go out on the street and ask 100 people what DVORAK is, 40 will think its cousin to the Daliks, 59 will think it is a party drug and 1 will tell you it's a keyboard layout type
***** I guess it depends how much time you spend typing (english i.e. not coding or other languages) but IMO for the majority of people DAVORAK is less practical, IMO you would really have to be a typist by trade to see measurable benefits without the inconveniences out weighing the benefits.
I switched from QWERTY to Dvorak. My previous QWERTY speed was 70-75. It's been a few months, and my Dvorak speed is about 55 WPM. I'm not a touch typist yet (aka I still need to look at the keys while typing), but there's always going to be room to improve.
I wish you included Colemak in your comparison because it is a more easy switch if you're familiar with Qwerty [citation needed]. Also by having the commonly used letters separated on a touchscreen and swiping to type it is easier for the software to ...
Juan S Iles C well a few would like to remedy it but it is mainly a corporate decision; they would have to pay for retraining staff to use Colemak or Dvorak layout and they are unwilling to do so. Most staff wouldn't retrain themselves that would also be a solution but that's unlikely.
Chris Druif I know you wanted citation, but Colemak is easier to switch to from QWERTY because there are fewer key relocations in Colemak than in Dvorak.
In romania we use qwerty, not qwertz, but if you want you can set it to it. In the communist period, most typewriters were imported from Germany, which used qwertz.
soooo having switched to and from dvorak layouts at multiple points in my life, I think there's a method that can work for everyone, but the barometer of how well it's working between individuals varies with those individuals. Essentially, I think this comes down to having a good system to rewire your muscle memory, and the thing I did to overload the dvorak muscle memory was to use "LEARN TO TYPE" type games. There's a statistic out there that "5,000 repetitions of a properly executed motion will put it beyond the brain's control and in the spinal column's to administer, leaving the brain to trigger it only", and while I'm not so sure this metaphor is exactly correct, I can definitely say it's the working theory I've applied and that it has worked for me. In practice actually doing this, I spent a few hours watching movies or youtube videos and following along these typing tutorials the first night, and got to nearly-reflexive action, that I quickly forgot, on the home row and row above, and then the next maybe 2-4 days slowly cement this in. Once you have gotten a relatively small number of repetitions in on the new pattern, you can start trying to use it to do actual writing, and that second phase of actual application of the new pattern is where it really starts to take off. Again, TLDR, try a 'learn to type' game, then move on to writing actual linguistic expressions with the new layout, and give yourself a lot of leeway for not being instantly faster, because you're kind of learning a new typing language, even if it's one with all the same letters you've used before. Typed on dvorak.
***** You don't touch type on a phone, mate. So QWERTY's spaced out keys means it's easier on a phone as you have better (more even) use of both thumbs all over the keyboard vs. Dvorak's concentrated keys on the home row.
I agree. I use dvorak on my computer but leave qwerty on small hand-held devices. I don't know where the dvorak keys are visually, only by muscle memory, and as TCVidz pointed out, you don't touch type on a phone. QWERTY, I know visually, so it works better on the phone.
People need to stop focusing on the supposed speed of Dvorak. I wish that August Dvorak hadn't focused so much on the speed of the keyboard when he invented it. Otherwise, it might be more successful. Typing speed is limited more by thinking speed. What you should really focus on is the efficiency. The efficiency cannot be denied. If you ever type on one, you will feel how much more intuitive it is. It just...feels right. I personally found Dvorak to be much easier to learn than QWERTY. Another thing that cannot be denied, is the hipster factor. I personally like telling people about how I go against mainstream layouts :-). If you like trying new things, give Dvorak a shot. If you don't already touch-type, _definitely_ give Dvorak a shot. But if you are already fast on QWERTY and you think that switching will double your speed, you might be disappointed. And finally, don't even bother if you aren't going to touch-type. It will probably be slower for visual typing since your fingers cover the most common keys. But if you do learn it, do yourself a favor and don't re-arrange the physical keys; that's just dumb. By doing that, you will be moving the home key bumps.
*"Typing speed is limited more by thinking speed."* At the time Dvorak was around, typewriters were typically used by secretaries, to put what their bosses said/wrote into print. Unless you were a writer, you didn't really "compose" at the keyboard: you typed what you read, as fast as you read it. That's why there was such an importance place on being able to type "blind": you typed fastest (and with least errors) if you kept your eyes on the writing, and "felt" for the keys without peeking.
I've been using dvorak for 7 years. I play guitar regularly and type daily for various reasons. It's honestly about the same speed, but man, the comfort is amazing
3:11 You can reassign your shortcut in your system settings and most of the latest games allows you to reassign button config so this should not be a problem.
I've typed Dvorak for decades after I found out the things discussed in this video, such as the inefficiency of qwerty and the reason it exists at all. I switched mostly because I was angry and couldn't accept the inertia that kept whole industries from using a better system. I don't have any regrets and now I even use a keyboard with all blank keycaps. Looking at the keyboard is not an option.
I learned to type on Dvorak using the Ten Thumbs Typing Tutor program. In the beginning I bought stickers for the keys but no longer use them. If the keyboard has a QUERTY or QUERTZ or some other layout not a problem, I am a touch not a look-and-touch typist. It is also very good security. I had one time early on when my wife and I were using the same computer, so I had it setup to switch keyboard layouts. I was on a business trip and got a strange email from my wife. At first it looked like someone had just when crazy hitting keys. Then I realized that the layout had switched to Dvorak and she did not know how to switch it back. She had touch typed the message using the QUERTY layout she knew but Dvorak was what was coming out. It took me a bit to decoded her message which confirmed my thoughts on the switched layout. I of course had mercy on her and immediately email her instructions on how to switch the layout.
BadhamKnibbs Good point, I use it mainly for typing. I use dvorak, but I keep my physical keys to QWERTY. Then if anyone wants to use my computer or I want to game, we just press shift+alt and boom it toggles back to QWERTY. The biggest reason I type dvorak is less stress on my hands, my hands rarely change position since over 70% is typed on the home row. Oh, I almost forgot, I changed one detail in my dvorak set up, my I and U are switched around: AOEU becomes AOEI since most words have I instead of U.
Ariel Sutton for me it's AOEI since I is used way more than U. My WASD is ", A O E" I agree in that sense, but then, you could have the reversed Dvorak instead. instead of AOEI, it would be SNTH so the keys would be arranged: LRCGFYP . , '+/\ SNTHDUIEOA- ZVWMBXKJQ; Then WASD would be: RSNT Then ASDF would be: SNTH Hmmm, this would actually make hotkeys easier, so Control T, Control S, Control V, all that stuff would be accessible by your left hand. Okay okay, we need this to be a thing, holy shit it's genius, reverse Dvorak.
Nice job and thanks for setting us straight about the reason for QWERTY. I too was under the misconception that QWERTY was developed to slow down the typist. We were not told that it was actually needed for mechanical reasons to prevent jamming. I have decided, after all these years of typing and using a computer, that I am going to finally give the Dvorak keyboard a try. I may not be able to get used to having CTRL / Z, X, C, or V in other positions of the keyboard, but if that's too big a problem I guess I'll just have to go back to QWERTY. The idea of QWERTY still being used just because it had been around so long and people were used to it reminds me of the U.S. attempting to convert to the Metric system in the 60's. But, oh how much better life would be if we had made the transition back then like other countries. My wife was raised in Japan and was educated in the imperial system, but later had to go through the painful process of switching over to metric. She said it was troublesome, but now she says that the imperial system is so difficult because she has gotten used to the metric system. So, the moral of the story is our human tendency for laziness is what makes it more difficult for us in the long run. If we would just bite the bullet we would be happier in the long run. So, my point is - it's too bad that we didn't cave in to the Dvorak keyboard. We might have been better off.
Per the misconception about "QWERTY was developed to slow down the typist", I don't find the history all that helpful because compared to the Dvorak arrangement, the QWERTY arrangement does indeed slow the typist down.
I switched to Dvorak years ago to stave off repetitive stress injuries that I was starting to notice the early signs of (as a programmer, it's an occupational hazard). It only took me about a month to get back up to my normal typing speed, but I probably had a slight advantage over most people though: I was, at the time, the type of nerd who spray painted my keyboard, so I was used to not seeing the keys. These days I just buy the keyboard blank to begin with. Anyway it worked and it was several years before signs of carpal tunnel started showing up again, at which point I invested in an Ergodox keyboard, which I of course have programmed to a Dvorak layout. Now all that said my Ergodox does have a qwerty layer for gaming. Unfortunately there's just no way around it. Most games you can remap the controls easy enough, but every once in a while you'll come across one that you can't. And at work I have a standard keyboard sitting off to the side in case someone else has to use my computer.
Yeah, "the type of nerd who spray painted my keyboard". Been there, done that. I've been using Dvorak for a few years now. I'm not really that fast, but I was way slower with qwerty, mainly because I never learned. If you can't type, learning Dvorak first is a great idea and it's way easier than what the video claims. It does help using a trainer, like Klavaro, but it has to do more with training, as in "with your eyes closed", trying to feel where your fingers are and, last but not least, focusing while you learn.
I learned Dvorak years ago as a necessity because of RSI. I had to slow my typing and so decided to hit two birds with one stone by learning Dvorak. I just used a normal QWERTY keyboard, but wrote the Dvorak keys on the side of the keys facing me. That way, if I forget the Dvorak key, I just need to raise my hand and look. I still use Dvorak to this day and type faster on it than I did on QWERTY previously.
@@Bird9600 not much tbh. I'm left handed and feel like Dvorak favours the right a bit. I also use a lot of different languages, which makes it more complicated.
I switched to Dvorak. I started learning in September 2017, and my speed and accuracy are almost entirely back 6 months later. I think it was worth the switch. It was tough to retrain my muscle memory, and occasionally I will accidentally reach for the QWERTY position, but that has mostly stopped by now. I like this layout a lot better. It feels more natural on my hands, a lot less awkward stretches for commonly used "clusters" of certain letters. I recommend something like TypingClub or Mavis Beacon -- and a Model M keyboard!
That's what is frustrating about people saying it's not worth the hassle: you can't measure comfort and feel in a study with pure numbers. It may not get you much faster, but it will absolutely help you with your fingers and wrists tiring out all the time. I can't imagine going back to QWERTY.
It's azerty and still the standard in Belgium and France because they like to be different. It's probably more favorable to the French language even though the Flemish use it too. If you really wanna know more about azerty Wikipedia is your friend.
I moved from QWERTY to AZERTY 6 years ago, and I can tell you, even for the french language, AZERTY is horrible. Plus, it also has the inconvenience of being incapable of fully typing in other languages such as Portuguese because of a lack of one key that is present in all QWERTY keyboards.
Vindel Mauser Yeah I have family in Belgium and their keyboards always freak me out. Weirdly enough the keyboards on their phones are often QWERTY (you have to manually change it to AZERTY and not everyone knows how to do that so they just learn typing QWERTY). Furthermore they speak Flemish (Dutch) so even if it was better for the French language it wouldn't be beneficial to them. Which key are you talking about?
Azerty, qwerty, qwertz,... they are all just as good it just depends on what you prefer and what you learn to type on. And the reason that azerty is used by the flemish is that in the past french was superior and they wanted to be special so it was used in belgium and france and when we (flemish) became more superior, we already had a keyboard configuration and we didn’t change it.
I was able to convert my work PC, home PC and android keyboards to Dvorak all at once, which made immersion retraining a lot easier, took about 3 weeks to get the hang of it, that was 10 years ago after using QWERTY for 20. As for games and what not still expecting QWERTY, the Logitech G15 Keypad (or the Nostromo if you're a Razer fan) allows creating a "any key will do" or a remap back to QWERTY's WASD (or even ESDF if you prefer, I actually use SAWD/DSEF alignment myself for easier forward movement with less strain), you can then profile switch on the fly or make a complete per-game/genre set of profiles to switch to as needed.
I don't Qwerty OR Dvorak, I Colemak instead; it solves the ZXCV scrambling (by leaving it as is) and, consequently, focuses all of the letter keys back to the left so the right hand can keep on controlling the mouse, and that's the main downfall of Dvorak for me is that it's too much keyscrambling and too rightcentric. What's more: ALL of the keys that the left and right hands control on a Qwerty, except for P and E, are controlled by the same hands as Colemak. No keys switch hands except for two of them between Qwerty and Colemak, but all but two keys (A and M) on a Dvorak (including comma, period, and slash) are scrambled on Dvorak.
+A Tapir Named Jeff Is the colemak community so small? My new keyboard is going to arrive tomorrow (US layout instead of german) and from then on I'll learn colemak. Are we friends now? x)
I use Dvorak and I find your note rather interesting. I could see the advantage of having the left hand be dominate so to allow you to continue using the mouse bit I find that hard to see it work effectively. As a programmer I will stick with Dvorak not because it's better but because I use a lot of symbols so both hands are going to be busy regardless. Plus if you have it as a Windows language setting it does not affect key bindings for games and programs
It's not about speed. It's about comfort. I've been using Dvorak exclusively for about 5 years - it's far more comfortable than qwerty. I use a standard qwerty keyboard and can type about 40 wpm either way. I'm typing this comment in Dvorak. Once you switch to Dvorak you'll never go back to qwerty. One problem though is that Windows will not let copy, cut and paste be mapped to anything but ctrl-c, ctrl-x and ctrl-v, so that's different keystrokes with Dvorak.
In my case, it's impossible for me to go Dvorak because I spent 13 years of my computer using life to not only type fast but also accurate to the point of not needing to look at the keys while typing.
I live in the Philippines and I see half of my classmates and friends had to look at the keyboard to type while the others are like me. One time, a few friends saw me type without looking and they were a bit amazed.
It seems like the design objective of QWERTY, to move the most common keys toward the outer edge of the keyboard, is also very desirable on a handheld device, especially a small thumb-operated touchscreen. So the ideal keyboard layout for PDAs and smartphones was invented more than a century ahead of time.
poisonhemlock Did your dumbass not pay ANY attention to the video. He clearly said that the most commonly used letters were placed in the center to prevent jamming. You probably didn't pay attention in school either and this is the reason your income is at the poverty level. Your entire comment is pure idiocy given what I have said. You're a fucking moron.
I've gotten used to Dvorak. I just changed the layout completely and typed with that for a week. Also I can still type on qwerty but at only half speed at most. It's super weird playing wasd on Dvorak, but I manage. Vim and emacs works just as badly on Dvorak as on qwerty, since their hotkeys are not designed to be consecutive anyway!
Dvorak is in majority for americans. There are several (actually a lot. And some are really crazy too, look for the plover-layout!) other alternative keyboard layouts for different languages. Especially because several langauges use other letters more often than the other, etc. German for example has neo-layout as an alternative.
Luniii737 In Belgium (Where i live) they normally don't use QWERTY either but AZERTY instead, but I'm still using QWERTY because it seems more convenient. i'm not saying the whole world should use Dvorak or any keyboard layout that isn't standard in their country right now.
***** Yes there are QWERTY keyboard layouts that contain special characters. The keyboard I'm using now for example has a nordic layout for the nordic countries. It's just the symbol keys on the right side that have been moved around. In their place are three new keys. My OS, which is set to norwegian, read them as ÆØÅ, but if I switch to any other nordic language, it will read them differently. ÄÖ are probably there for swedish users, etc.
I admit it probably took me 6 weeks to get to the point that I didn't have to think twice about Dvorak…but I didn't use a single typing tutor. There are dozens of free online typing tutors. I think it would have gone twice as fast if I had availed myself. Honestly, the home row is so useful, you can master it in a week, and that's most of the job done right there. :-)
But, the world typing record is on the Dvorak Simplified Keyboard held by Barbara Blackburn, with 150 wpm for 50 minutes, and 170 wpm for shorter periods. Her top speed was 212 wpm, which is pretty fucking fast.
Actually, a lady named Stella Pajunas-Garnand reached 216 wpm in 1946 on an IBM Electric, which used Qwerty. Besides, if all wanted to be really fast, we would use those stenotype machines.
Have you ever done a typing test? its not just how fast can you type letters with spaces between them. Most typing tests will give you random words ranging up to 10 or more letters and then when you are done with the test it will take the total characters you typed and divide it by 5 to get your WPM because the average overall length of words typed is 5 letters (I assume).
orangeapples It's not the same because the Metric system is not just superior but also ubiquitous. Dvorak may be superior but nobody uses it. Imperial system is inferior AND nobody uses it.
0M9H4X imperial system is based on SI now, and has been for a while. look it up. they're equal more or less, and will be even more equal once the kilogram is based off a number instead of a decaying lump of matter.
Actually there are three countries that use the Imperial System: United States, Myanmar, and Liberia. Also Great Britan was the origin of the Imperial system, and the only reason they abandoned their own system was to gain access to the European market. Besides, why would we Americans want to use a French system. FYI everyone uses imperial clocks and an imperial calender.
Actually no its completely right, and the only wrong things might be the calendar part. BTW how many of those hundreds of calendars have 12 months and how many of those hundreds of calendars do you use on a day to day basis.
I switched to Dvorak 5-7 years ago, and while the speed improvements are minor, the real advantage to the dvorak layout comes from comfort. It is hard to describe just how much more comfortable typing is when your fingers aren't flying all over the place. I still know QWERTY, but it has fallen to the wayside, and I cannot imagine going back. Typing for several hours in QWERTY is an absolute chore just because of how much more you move your fingers around. Also, seeing someone else try to use your computer is not a downside to the dvorak layout. The look of befuddlement on their faces when the keys display the wrong letters is amazing. On windows, cntrl-shift switches the layouts back and forth, so if, for whatever reason, I do need QWERTY, it is a keystroke away.
Suprised that you never brought up the anecdote about how many of the top row characters aside from those placed there for the jamming reason are there so you can type out `Typewriter` using only the top row
Why do we use qwerty keyboards? Answer: Some big business people just kinda looked at it while designing the typewriter and said "eh, good enough", influenced the entire market of typewriters and how people would use them, and now it's too hard to transition to something more efficient.
true, which is why i'm learning dvorak, but It probably doesn't make a difference to most people. dvorak is better than qwerty, but people don't see anything wrong with it
Well I like to believe the more stress we put on our fingers, the faster we'll evolve to a version of humans capable to doing this stuff without carpal tunnel.
to be honest, Dvorak is overrated and I hate the typing style it gives off, not to mention it completely fucks the keyboard shortcuts. If you want to try a keyboard layout that is actually better than qwerty, try colemak or workman.
I use colemak, it's about as good as dvorak (maybe better?), but keeps as many keys as possible close to qwerty. I can't confirm it's faster, but it's definitely way more comfortable and fun to type with. I went from 95WPM to 125WPM, but that's probably just from practicing typing I forgot how to use any qwerty layouts though...
I switched to Dvorak a number of years ago. I struggled to learn it for the first week because I kept switching back and forth to Qwerty. I tried switching cold turkey and did a few online typing drills and it worked. I can still switch back and forth pretty fluidly when necessary.
Those who claim Dvorak is far faster, ignore the evidence against it. The fact is that, though you can technically be faster (proven mathematically), you're not going to be, because the most limiting factor, is not finger motion, but the speed of your brain. But if you analyze finger travel in Dvorak vs Qwerty, you'll find an insane difference (somewhere they claimed 5% of the distance traveled). So no, you're not going to be faster, BUT, it will be smoother and more ergonomic; which does have evidence to back it up.
Wouldn't finger motion alone make you faster? I type fairly fast and I can tell you my brain spends most of it's time waiting for my fingers to reach the right keys. The typing is usually moving at about the same speed but my brain constantly has to stop and wait for my fingers to catch up to my running internal dictation. Also since Dvorak is supposedly designed for less errors, that means fewer typos and thus less redundant typing in order to correct mistakes.
For most people no, finger motion is not slowing them down. Most people who switch to Dvorak are not faster. Some are slightly faster but accredit it to the fact that they learn from scratch, fixing bad habits. As you mistakes; Dvorak doesn't really help noticeably, and those speed tests would include time retyping mistakes. For you, you may find yourself faster. Fun Fact: the fastest typer in the world apparently uses Dvorak. I actually prefer the Arensito layout ("www.pvv.org/~hakonhal/main.cgi/keyboard"). (Here's another useful page "patorjk.com/keyboard-layout-analyzer")
Jonathan Levi Is this comment implying that most people can already type as fast as the human brain allows? Because otherwise it doesn't make sense. Unless I misunderstand.
Old video, but these layouts are heavily dependent on which language u type! In my language Swedish we use "our" weird letters a lot! So QWERTY/DVORAK is probably most relevant to the English language.
Just started training Dvorak.
This comment took minutes to type.
How are you doing now? I am almost back to my normal typing speed after 3 months and very glad I switched to Dvorak.
ChasingTruth TakingFlak oh really ?
I am learning Dvorak for about 1 month now and my typing speed 35-45 wpm. Actually, it could be better if English were my first language. What about your results in one month?
I am going to get dvorak stickers and train with dvorak.nl
After shipping and training I will try to remember to come back here and post how long it took me
You don't need to use stickers for learning Dvorak. Moreover, I would say that this even makes things worse for you
Seems like a good way to keep people from messing with your computer.
Plus blank key caps.
+Snoitseuq Pie that was my motivation for switching to colemak with some blanks
Oh, but it's fun when you have qwerty key-caps, and they start typing unknowingly!
Someone could rather easily change the keyboard input to some layout that he is familiar with.
George Hamilton not if your keyboard is natively set to colemak
"When the typewriter was invented back in the 1960s [...]"
What?!
It's written 1868 on one of the schematics so I guess he meant 1860s.
Exactly
1860s makes more sense
How can I trust this channel when he made mistake in 2nd second of video.
I always thought the Chicago Typewriter, which got that moniker during Prohibition, was named after normal typewriters.
I guess it was the other way around!
"Do we really need the letter Q?"
Of course not, TechUickie."
*Techkwickie
*Vuk Karadzic enters chat*
OOF..
Tekwiki
Tech kwikkee
well... this is awkward...
Hahahah
im guessing your his heir LOL
Jack Dvorak
😲😲😲
@@theultimateweeb4276: You're guessing his _what_ is Dvorak's heir?
Haha, Jack!
"Do we really need x, or q?" Now that is a good ..uestion.
Ne..t ..uestion please!
@@Gquannvr Nekst kwestion do you mean?
Daat is really a gud kwescen. Si it would be eesi for pipal to andarstaand inglish if aalfabet sounds wer similar in eec werd.
I think that hecs and kue are good..
kuestion you mean?
I switched to Dvorak when this video came out, just finished typing this comment now.
haha
Lol
Lol
Lol
haha
This is the most proper video about Dvorak keyboard I've watched on RUclips.
I switched to Dvorak a few years ago and I am using it to type this comment. It took me about a month to learn... or a month and a half? I couldn't remember precisely. I can still switch to Qwerty if necessary, just need to stare at the keyboard whereas I just remember all the keys on Dvorak.
In my opinion, Dvorak does not necessary make you type faster, but it sure makes your typing experience a lot more comfortable. I used to have a sore pinky because of overuse of computer (and that leads to me to try Dvorak). Now with my typing mostly done on the middle row and sometimes on the top, I barely need to move my wrist and that allows me to rest both my hands on the same position comfortably. Does it make me type faster? I don't know. But I am certainly a happier computer user.
I totally agree on being a happier computer user after making the transition.
Silk compared to sandpaper is an accurate comparison :-) Love love love typing on Dvorak.
Learned dvorak years ago. It is legitimately great and does feel like almost lazy typing for how much easier typing is. I wouldn't say that i really type faster (though i did test is years back and I certainly do) but more that It just feels better physically. It was not easy to learn or get used to, but once I did, it was great. I do swap back and forth sometimes when I need to type in passwords, but it is pretty easy to just attach switching between keyboard formats to a hotkey and voila. It can be set up in virtually any system in seconds. For me, it is great. (A lot of games can actually recognize that it is dvorak and switch automatically and for those that dont, it doesnt take that long, or I just hotkey back to qwerty.)
I have just about the exact same perspective/experience as you. Glad i'm not alone. lol
It's funny, some big name games don't recognize it, but some smaller ones do. Minecraft does, so I'm set :)
Are you swapping back and forth or is your multi-user PC forcing you to use QWERTY to log in?
Binary would be the best, and you only need a few keys.
telegram... just one keys need
Even better!
Nurul Mahfuzh You are a God.
Voice recognition...NO KEYS
Or have an alternate Universe do everything for you.
I'm a Dvorak user, and would never look back now. I tried switching to Dvorak quite a while ago and failed once, because I gave myself the option of switching back to QWERTY with a single keystroke, which basically meant that I did that all the time. The second time I tried to swap, I just rearranged my keys, switched the settings in the OS, actually removed QWERTY and didn't give myself the option of switching back. I also taught myself to touch type at the same time as this was something I never did on a QWERTY keyboard. For a short while after mostly learning where the keys were in Dvorak and briefly doing some typing exercises to teach me the layout, I switched to blank keycaps while I made the transition. I've switched back now though and use a Filco mechanical keyboard (Cherry MX Blue) with a custom laser etched keycap set with the right layout on it.
It was pretty frustrating at first, but after a while I became pretty proficient at it, though making the occasional typo by pressing the wrong key (I was still using QWERTY at work so I wasn't totally useless there!). After a while, when I became 'good enough' at Dvorak, I dropped QWERTY entirely and switched at work too, and my speed just improved from there. I can no longer use a QWERTY keyboard, the muscle memory has completely gone, but this is a total non-issue for me - everything I use (smart phone, keyboards etc) is set to Dvorak now, and I rarely need to use other people's computers. When I do though, it's not a major issue, I'm just a lot slower than normal!
Definitely wouldn't switch back though, you can just feel that Dvorak is a superior layout, and how little your fingers move compared to before, with loads of typing done on the home row.
how long did it take to be decent enough in dvorak? I just made the switch today.
2 weeks, though I never learned to touch type properly with QWERTY to begin with. I didn't change my keycaps around, which (while slowing me down significantly) helped a lot since I couldn't rely on looking at the keyboard as a backup and resorting to hunt'n'peck. I kept a cheat sheet taped to the wall by my monitor when I was slipping up, and I completely committed to the task instead of switching back to QWERTY just because I "had to get something done NOW".
If you've had muscle memory developed for QWERTY it will probably take longer, but 10 years later I'm happily typing at a cool 100WPM on average and without the RSI that runs in my family.
I don't know if you should take a look at the neo2 layout. It offers almost all european diacritics to add on „regular“ letters.
I use the German Dvorak Typ II for about 3 years now. I can't say it made me much faster at typing. The biggest thing slowing me down when writing is phrasing out what I am writing anyay. I do seem to be around 5-10% faster when copying text from screen. The big difference I feel is that my hands stay very much relaxed even after longer writing sessions.
I do still use QWERTZ though. At work, because I can't make these changes, working on many different machines. At home I do sometimes still switch back, because some of the long complex passwords I use in variations over years are stored in movement in my brain and it would just take too much effort to always learn them in both layouts.
I do tell you though, that Dvorak really can be a pain when you are a gamer. Some games are great in simply adapting the bindings to the exact same spot on your keyboard, thus bewaring the actualy layout the game creators intended, but many (all Valve games for example) do not, but the actual character behind it. Switching the layout in game often doesnt help. You have to quit the game and start it with the correct layout set before.
I can write blindly on Dvorak and QWERTZ but what I can not do on Dvorak is to blindly tap a single random charackter with one finger. I can only use it when my hands are put on the orientation nobs on F and J. I only use Dvorak in Software so finding a particular key directly has never been part of my training. I use computers pretty much since I am born
Shortcuts are also still an issue, because you often need both hands. If you copy paste a lot using your mouse in between that's horrible, but as somebody who is quick with navigating by keyboard alone, thats not a big problem.
None are better qwerty and Dvorak are both good
Due to this video two years ago I switched my phone's keyboard to Dvorak, just for fun, I actually really like it. But now I forgot how to type on Qwerty and no one else can type on my phone.
Rahul Gill
😂
DVORAK = Top notch security
HilaKleiner Who was complaining?
really? how do you use the swiping thingy
Not to be a Debbie downer, but Dvorak makes very limited sense on a phone/ any thumb based keyboard, unless it's what you type on the desktop so to maintain familiarty. Most of the advantages of the layout are nullified by thumb typing on a handheld device.
Lol, that's not really what it was meant for. But doing so will make it easier to remember where the keys are on an actual keyboard.
Linus what happened to you
He's on LinusTechTips. I don't think he does videos on here anymore.
Dude it’s Taran fucking Taran like he’s god ok
@@Dan-ck5dl it is? he looks.....and sounds.........different
He grew a beard
@@fuseteam No its Taran
I briefly tried years ago to adjust to it, but I quickly gave up because even if I got used to it at home, every other device would still be QWERTY so it would have been too annoying to switch for little gain.
If you have a work computer with a GUI (unless it's a custom interface that doesn't let you switch to other windows) that you log into your own account on, the keyboard layout is per account if you modify it. Unfortunately you'll still see the same layout on the physical keyboard. You'll just have to go by memory and avoid viewing it.
@@apestogetherstrong341 no reason to switch to dvorak, I have muscle memory on my phone and laptop keyboard
@Harry Kuntz there really is no proven gain
@Harry Kuntz I mean qwerty isn't bad tho
I had the same experience. I also realized that almost all of the fastest typists in the world still use QWERTY, so it can't be that bad, I suppose.
"I tried once and it was too difficult for me, so I gave up" very motivational
It was super easy I thought 🤷
😂😂
I'll just say that I'm using DVORAK even though im really using QWERTY so people think im cool...
JakesterTV Wow you use Dvorak* !! You're so cool!
+Boss Tweed SOOOO COOL! CONGRATZ!!!
+Tommy59375 qwertys to mainstream
+Boss Tweed Your profile pic makes you uncool
poop bott
Dvorak user here since about, oh, 1986 I think. It's not just about speed. For me it's about reducing pain from RSI. I first switched because I had read an article and wanted to see for myself what the difference was. So I wrote a TSR program to remap my keys. Ironically, I never got around to doing a speed test, neither before nor after.
Heyyy that's not ironic
Yes, comfort is the main reason to use Dvorak. It feels so much easier. Also the nerd factor is nice. The looks I get when people try typing on my keyboard... 🤣
But I wouldn't pick Dvorak if I was starting today. There's even better layouts like colemak or workman and support for these is a lot better than it was 20 years ago. Dvorak is kinda like vim: It's available on almost every system.
I started practicing Dvorak some weeks ago and, man, I am in love. Since then, everytime I use a QWERTY layout for about five minutes makes me uncomfortable, and that's because Qwerty forced me to make unnecessary movement that my hands were free from. My speed, from 70 wpm (in Qwerty) dropped to 30, 39, after the first week of practice.
Also.
The majority of games that are keyboard compatible are not affected by the keyboard layout you are currently using. Using Dvorak and playing a silly game, like Roblox, is not different than the normal.
*QWERTY
I've been typing on DV for about a year now. It took me a couple months to be proficient. The hardest part about learning is that in order to do it effectively, you need to go completely cold turkey from QWERTY. No switching back just to "write a quick email." It's almost like learning a new language; it's only going to stick if you fully immerse yourself. I also found that, while learning, I unlearned a lot of bad habits I picked up while learning QWERTY, like looking at my hands while typing. Most people learn to type now when they are very young. Paying attention in typing class was not my top priority in high school, and I would cheat and look at my hands. It all felt so forced. When you are learning a keyboard layout because you want to, you put a lot more effort into it and learn it the right way. Not to mention, DV is definitely easier for touch typing because you don't have to move your hands / reach when typing most words.
So is Dvorak better than QWERTY then?
@@rozemo7953 It's better in general but it doesn't mean you need to use it to become a better typist. I'd give Dvorak or, better yet, Colemak or a variation of Colemak a try.
100% this. switching to dv made me better
I made the switch in 2012 (having been a touch-typist in QWERTY since 1984) based on a number of accounts of Dvorak being easier on the wrists. It was super frustrating to drop from 80+ wpm down to about 20, and it took months of drills to build back up (my speed since then has varied from 70-90, which is acceptable to me). Yeah, it sucked. But it was well worth it. I don't regret the switch at all. I used to end every workday with sore wrists from all the twister-style typing on QWERTY. That is now just a distant memory.
I don't think its a misconception at all. Typewriter jamming was caused by "typing too quickly" as stated at around 0:18.
By placing the most commonly used letters far away, that effectively slows the typing down so that there are less jams. The point is that it slows down the typing; yes, I understand that the typing process included jams and therefore the less jams, the less time the overall process of typing takes. I'm mainly focusing on the point that the actual typing portion was slowed down purposefully.
Not a misconception.
I don't even use a specific keyboard layout, i just write on my monitor then scan it, and send a fax. Git gud scrubs.
***** Yeah...i guess i missed that one lol
Bernardo Oliveira You still send faxes? What a loser. I just send the whole computer by carrier pigeon
I light my beacon. My message sound is "The beacons are lit"...... Get on my level.
Ohh gawd
so qwerty is like windows
Widely accepted, good operating system that hipsters like to hate on then?
So qwerty is like Ubuntu? :P (Elementary os master race)
doe maeries Xyos212
Except there is nothing wrong with the Qwerty layout, whereas windows is a mess compared to most Linux distros and the only reason it's still used is that pretty much anything is made to work with Windows, and OS X and Linux are an afterthought.
Xyos212 lol ;)
Yeah, I'm sure you use dvorak on your linux
I switched to Dvorak a couple years ago. It was difficult, but I think it was worth it. I was able to learn true touch-typing (which I probably couldn't do in QWERTY, because I would need to unlearn bad habits I'd developed over the years). Most of the speed improvement probably came from being able to touch-type, but I am sure Dvorak's better layout helped too. The main benefit, however, isn't the speed ... it's the comfort. My hands feel much better after a day using the Dvorak keyboard. (I still use a "QWERTY" keyborad, but on a computer with Windows set to receive the input as Dvorak. And I can switch between Dvorak and QWERTY with a keyboard shortcut.)
i have been using the Dvorak for over a year now on my touchscreen smartphone and am extremely satisfied. despite what is said in this video, it took me no more than 2 weeks to master it. my typing on the phone is now lightning fast, using both thumbs or even just one.
what i am particularly looking forward to is the one-hand variant of the Dvorak (either left or right) to use on the tablet (which i dont own yet).
as for the issue of alternative languages, i have the Croatian dictionary installed which i use parallel to English at the same time, mostly using autocorrect to insert special characters or just ignoring them altogether (c instead of č etc).
HERE'S AN INTERESTING POINT: as much as i type insanely fast on the touchscreen Dvorak and on the hardware QWERTY - with no trouble switching instantly from my phone dvorak to my desktop qwerty - when i accidentally turn on the qwerty on my phone i am completely lost and struggle to find each of the letters, like a granny.
so much for the claim that, psychologically, the medium is unimportant. :D
Both Dvorak and Querty were developed using the english language in mind. For those who have to write in other languages, this debate is useless.
BTW, X and Q are used a lot in portuguese.
Por causa das vogais na linha do meio Dvorak deve ser mais rápido
Dvorak can be easily used to type in Portuguese. I do it all the time and I find that with Dvorak one keeps their fingers on the home row most of the time in Portuguese just like in English.
I was forced to change keyboard layouts due to RSI. It took me about a week to be able to type blind at a decent enough speed. About a month or two to surpass my old qwerty speed. I did it by printing out a Dvorak layout image and placing it besides the computer. Then I opened a text editor (any will do) and grabbed a towel. Placed the towel over my hands and started copying some texts. Look at the printout to find the key you need to type, and then type it. Learning the new layout went very fast.
Also, most games nowadays actually use the hardware key codes and don't care one way or another what layout you've selected. Older games might need a bit of settings screen duty. 😏
I'm using QWERTZ.
I see a German keyboard here :D
Me too, Swiss keyboard.
John Zakaria Yes :D QWERTZ
12 QWERTZ master race
QWERTZ FTW! :D
Using a DVORAK since 2009, when I bought my first Mac (I wanted to use a DVORAK keyboard for quite a time... a new computer/OS was my motivation: 'lets make it all weird at the same time'), and I moved the keycaps. I currently use an Apple Wireless Keyboard also with keycaps moved to Dvorak layout. I don't know if today I am faster than I was with QWERTY, but less finger 'traveling' is more comfortable and less painful. I am a fan.
You have an iPad Mac doesn't support DVORAK, you cannot use a DVORAK keyboard on a Mac. If you switch the keycaps around it will still be QWERTY just with mislabeled keys.
Hi 0M9H4X, I honestly don't know why you wrote this... because I am typing right now on a Mac with a DVORAK keyboard that was previously qwerty. You just open "System Preferences" > Keyboard > Input Sources and add a DVORAK layout (no additional programs, everything you need already comes in your OS X).
0M9H4X lol You dumbass. He even said in the video that you can switch to Dvorak on OSX. Someone doesn't know how to pay attention. That is probably a reason you failed to graduate from high school. But, don't worry we need those experienced Mcdonalds employees in the world to make my cheeseburger and fries when my cook is out sick.
BewareTheIdes he said you CANNOT use it on osx. rewatch the video.
0M9H4X No, he says (2m47s): "and most operating systems, except iOS, have built-in support for DVORAK keyboards". iOS = iPhone / iPad... OS X = Mac (and, come on, I said I use it on the Mac...) Also, notice the word "built-in support". You could always install 3rd party drivers/programs. The new iOS allows you to install 3rd-party apps with Keyboard layouts (no more jailbreak) - so, now even on iOS/iPhone you can have a DVORAK keyboard layout.
Anyway, you would already know all of this if you were truly interested in experimenting different keyboard layouts. :)
i switch between keyboard layouts. when i remember to practice dvorak! i type over 100wpm on qwerty and only 40wpm in dvorak. in the past i stuck at it a while and speed in dvorak comes up pretty fast ... 60-80wpm fairly easily. however, i did it to see if it's possible or even *easy* to maintain and switch between layouts. IT IS!! Learn dvorak layout. I figure it can only help your cognitive ability.
Did you mean 1860's?
4 seconds in and I had to stop the video cause that didn't sound correct at all. 1860's is more correct. Makes me wonder what else is wrong with the information.
I'm writing this with a DVORAK keyboard without using the prediction function and I hate myself already. I wish I improve at a motivating rate, as I'll have to overcome more than ten years of experience with a QWERTY keyboard, I learnt to type proficiently when I was 14... Almost 7 minutes to type this.
I hear ya, I got my first computer 22 years ago.... But since this seems completely pointless, I am definitely gonna do it!
I'm writing this with a DVORAK keyboard without using the prediction function and I hate myself already. I wish I improve at a motivating rate, as I'll have to overcome more than ten years of experience with QWERTY keyboard. I learnt to type proficiently when I was 14... Almost 7 minutes to type this.
Took me 20 seconds with QWERTY, man has muscle-memory become so important.
It took me 3 seconds to properly type in QWERTY because I've never wrote that word enough for it to be natural, fluent.
However seeing as I'm fluent with the QWERTY keyboard and that all of these words are just muscle memory, it's rather simple.
Sucks for you, who cares if technically DVORAK is more efficient.
I stopped with this challenge 3 days after I started. I thought it could be a great way to develop brain plasticity, but my efficiency was really low, it was hindering my communications.
it's ok, i switched to qgmlwby last night. I'm very slow right now, but my motivation lies in just how efficient this layout is!
Greater efficiency = greater speed potential.
Faster? Unknown.
Better? Absolutely Dvorak. I switched because I had to type quickly for a job and QWERTY was murdering my fingers and wrists.
QWERTY is ubiquitous, but it's really worth the time to learn it if you plan on typing or using a computer a lot. It takes around a month or two to really get the hang of it from QWERTY, but your hands will thank you.
Watching this with a Balkan QWERTZ layout.
auu ima balkanaca ovde
йцукен
Šit brate top komentar si ti
ś ć ż ź ó ł ą ę ń
literraly
I'm a Dvorak typist and I really like the layout. That being said...
If you're a decent QWERTY typist, don't switch to Dvorak for speed. You won't be that much faster. The best reason to switch is to help with wrist strain if you do a lot of typing and your wrists are bothering you... everything moves much less while you're typing, so it really does help.
This is it. Dvorak is much more comfortable than QWERTY. It's all about the comfort. 70% of what you type is on the home row. But it's always important to say: it takes a long time and a lot of effort to learn a second keyboard layout. On the 3rd day you want to give up. You cannot do this when you have papers to deliver!
if your fingers dont move much doesn't that mean faster typing speed?
@@jhefuwbkufkaj2632 The biggest obstacle in typing isn't usually finger speed, but mental speed.
I never got why QWERTY put the a on the left pinky finger (the weakest finger on the weaker hand), on a typewriter where the keys are much harder to press down it leads to a lot of faint or missed A's for me. And now I noticed it's in same place for Dvorak too..
WTF
why not use dvorak and set the keybindings to be in the same position?
+Some Weeb That is an option, unless a specific software does not allow for rebinding a key
+Some Weeb Because it's a pain doing that for each and every single game. What I do is this: my OS's keyboard layout is set to US English and I have two keyboards, one of which is just for typing, is ergonomic and therefore awkward for gaming anyway and does Dvorak to qwerty translation in hardware while the other is the gaming keyboard and does no translation. Boom, best of both worlds.
Penny Lane i always have to change keybindings anyway, so i guess this is more of a solution for me
Ariel Antunez then that game sucks ass...
Some Weeb Sure, to each his own. Some games do suck ass though or at least the PC port does. Might still be worth playing. Also a favorite among bad ports is when you _can_ remap the keys but it will still show the unmapped key on screen in tutorials or God forbid QTEs.
why the fuck is my facebook password on this video??
+Vales Valet well now we know his password is QWERTY now we just need to try every facebook account and see if we can hack it
+Mike Craft By Mike i think you would hack more accs then you think :D
Breaking News, Some kid from Michigan hacked 1.6 Billion Facebook accounts and then proceeded to change their name to Im Dumb For Setting My Password To QWERTY
lmao😂😂 hloy shit me to dont ddos m8
+Mike Craft By Mike woh u must b pro mlg haxer
Mid 1980’s, after 2 semesters of Qwerty, I could then start typing my own college papers. It didn’t take long before my hands ached. Fed up, I bought a used keyboard and crudely sawed it half, connected them, via flexible tether, and adjusted them to how my hands naturally rested - at a slight angle. Researching this approach, I came across an article on Dvorak, which intrigued me “w/a level of proficiency within 20-30 hours.”
Having access to a Mac, Mavis Beacon Teaches Typing offered software for a host of keyboard layouts with clear labels for the keys. My plan was, before doing any work, 30 to 45 minutes was dedicated to Dvorak. The roommate thought I was crazy. I thought I was set free.
Then, imagine my excitement with the intro of Mac’s split keyboard and a 10 key could plug into either the right or left side. Brilliant! Fast forward to today, whether it’s the ergo keyboard or the more compact laptop, I have never had hand strain w/Dvorak.
I would only use Dvorak if I was a hipster
Just so I can say things like
"Well yeah I use a keyboard, but it has this obscure layout that you probably never heard of before"
/\ /\ /\ /\ /\ /\
Written on a QWERTY keyboard
***** More efficient when typing perhaps but not more practical.
***** Because most things are designed with QWERTY in mind, you can change between the two or rebind but that's not exactly practical + if you learn DVORAK and go to use pretty much any other keypad (computer or otherwise) it'll most likely be QWERTY.
***** SUrreee it wasn't written on a QWERTY...
Anywho... what I wrote was a joke, it works because if you go out on the street and ask 100 people what DVORAK is, 40 will think its cousin to the Daliks, 59 will think it is a party drug and 1 will tell you it's a keyboard layout type
***** I guess it depends how much time you spend typing (english i.e. not coding or other languages) but IMO for the majority of people DAVORAK is less practical, IMO you would really have to be a typist by trade to see measurable benefits without the inconveniences out weighing the benefits.
I switched from QWERTY to Dvorak. My previous QWERTY speed was 70-75. It's been a few months, and my Dvorak speed is about 55 WPM. I'm not a touch typist yet (aka I still need to look at the keys while typing), but there's always going to be room to improve.
“Do we even need q?”
*posted on techquickie*
I wish you included Colemak in your comparison because it is a more easy switch if you're familiar with Qwerty [citation needed].
Also by having the commonly used letters separated on a touchscreen and swiping to type it is easier for the software to ...
el problema de siempre por lo visto nadie quiere remediar .
Juan S Iles C well a few would like to remedy it but it is mainly a corporate decision; they would have to pay for retraining staff to use Colemak or Dvorak layout and they are unwilling to do so.
Most staff wouldn't retrain themselves that would also be a solution but that's unlikely.
Chris Druif
I know you wanted citation, but Colemak is easier to switch to from QWERTY because there are fewer key relocations in Colemak than in Dvorak.
***** that's what I thought, thanks 😃
Unless you live in Belgium or France: we use an AZERTY keyboard.
in germany we use qwertz
+Dark Memories Same here, for Romania
Like me^^
In romania we use qwerty, not qwertz, but if you want you can set it to it. In the communist period, most typewriters were imported from Germany, which used qwertz.
+Radu Cismaru Dar daca setezi pe romana ai z in loc de y
soooo having switched to and from dvorak layouts at multiple points in my life, I think there's a method that can work for everyone, but the barometer of how well it's working between individuals varies with those individuals. Essentially, I think this comes down to having a good system to rewire your muscle memory, and the thing I did to overload the dvorak muscle memory was to use "LEARN TO TYPE" type games. There's a statistic out there that "5,000 repetitions of a properly executed motion will put it beyond the brain's control and in the spinal column's to administer, leaving the brain to trigger it only", and while I'm not so sure this metaphor is exactly correct, I can definitely say it's the working theory I've applied and that it has worked for me. In practice actually doing this, I spent a few hours watching movies or youtube videos and following along these typing tutorials the first night, and got to nearly-reflexive action, that I quickly forgot, on the home row and row above, and then the next maybe 2-4 days slowly cement this in. Once you have gotten a relatively small number of repetitions in on the new pattern, you can start trying to use it to do actual writing, and that second phase of actual application of the new pattern is where it really starts to take off. Again, TLDR, try a 'learn to type' game, then move on to writing actual linguistic expressions with the new layout, and give yourself a lot of leeway for not being instantly faster, because you're kind of learning a new typing language, even if it's one with all the same letters you've used before.
Typed on dvorak.
👍🏾
Did someone already mention that the typewriter was actually invented in 1860?
No
qwerty is better for phones imo, cause the keybaord is already so small its so easy to misstype letters with dvorak
/╲/\╭( ͡° ͡° ͜ʖ ͡° ͡°)╮/\╱\ I don't understand what you mean. Why would it be harder to type Dvorak on a phone?
***** You don't touch type on a phone, mate. So QWERTY's spaced out keys means it's easier on a phone as you have better (more even) use of both thumbs all over the keyboard vs. Dvorak's concentrated keys on the home row.
I agree. I use dvorak on my computer but leave qwerty on small hand-held devices. I don't know where the dvorak keys are visually, only by muscle memory, and as TCVidz pointed out, you don't touch type on a phone. QWERTY, I know visually, so it works better on the phone.
You guys don't touch type on your phones?
Excellent screen presence. Keep it up.
This wealth of knowledge will help me look cool.
People need to stop focusing on the supposed speed of Dvorak. I wish that August Dvorak hadn't focused so much on the speed of the keyboard when he invented it. Otherwise, it might be more successful. Typing speed is limited more by thinking speed. What you should really focus on is the efficiency. The efficiency cannot be denied. If you ever type on one, you will feel how much more intuitive it is. It just...feels right. I personally found Dvorak to be much easier to learn than QWERTY. Another thing that cannot be denied, is the hipster factor. I personally like telling people about how I go against mainstream layouts :-).
If you like trying new things, give Dvorak a shot. If you don't already touch-type, _definitely_ give Dvorak a shot. But if you are already fast on QWERTY and you think that switching will double your speed, you might be disappointed. And finally, don't even bother if you aren't going to touch-type. It will probably be slower for visual typing since your fingers cover the most common keys. But if you do learn it, do yourself a favor and don't re-arrange the physical keys; that's just dumb. By doing that, you will be moving the home key bumps.
*"Typing speed is limited more by thinking speed."* At the time Dvorak was around, typewriters were typically used by secretaries, to put what their bosses said/wrote into print. Unless you were a writer, you didn't really "compose" at the keyboard: you typed what you read, as fast as you read it. That's why there was such an importance place on being able to type "blind": you typed fastest (and with least errors) if you kept your eyes on the writing, and "felt" for the keys without peeking.
bcubed72 I see. I guess all I was really trying to say is that there are advantages outside of speed.
typing with dvorak method reduces fatigue. that to me, is the most important benefit.
@@bcubed72 I'm never able to type faster than I can think.
I've been using dvorak for 7 years. I play guitar regularly and type daily for various reasons. It's honestly about the same speed, but man, the comfort is amazing
3:11 You can reassign your shortcut in your system settings and most of the latest games allows you to reassign button config so this should not be a problem.
I've typed Dvorak for decades after I found out the things discussed in this video, such as the inefficiency of qwerty and the reason it exists at all. I switched mostly because I was angry and couldn't accept the inertia that kept whole industries from using a better system. I don't have any regrets and now I even use a keyboard with all blank keycaps. Looking at the keyboard is not an option.
Same, it's so good!
4:09 "Today's episode is brought to you by the letter L"
I can't remember if Taran said it or Elmo...
I learned to type on Dvorak using the Ten Thumbs Typing Tutor program. In the beginning I bought stickers for the keys but no longer use them. If the keyboard has a QUERTY or QUERTZ or some other layout not a problem, I am a touch not a look-and-touch typist. It is also very good security. I had one time early on when my wife and I were using the same computer, so I had it setup to switch keyboard layouts. I was on a business trip and got a strange email from my wife. At first it looked like someone had just when crazy hitting keys. Then I realized that the layout had switched to Dvorak and she did not know how to switch it back. She had touch typed the message using the QUERTY layout she knew but Dvorak was what was coming out. It took me a bit to decoded her message which confirmed my thoughts on the switched layout. I of course had mercy on her and immediately email her instructions on how to switch the layout.
"When the typewriter was developed in the 1960's"... great start to this video
It just seems like >ADH doesn't sound as catchy as WASD..
BadhamKnibbs Don't you mean ,AOE? ^_^
BadhamKnibbs Good point, I use it mainly for typing.
I use dvorak, but I keep my physical keys to QWERTY. Then if anyone wants to use my computer or I want to game, we just press shift+alt and boom it toggles back to QWERTY.
The biggest reason I type dvorak is less stress on my hands, my hands rarely change position since over 70% is typed on the home row.
Oh, I almost forgot, I changed one detail in my dvorak set up, my I and U are switched around:
AOEU becomes AOEI
since most words have I instead of U.
BadhamKnibbs And AOEU isn't as catchy as ASDF
IMAGINE THIS: AOQU Movie instead of the ASDF Movie!!!!
THAT WOULD RUIN MY WORLD O_O
Ariel Sutton for me it's AOEI since I is used way more than U.
My WASD is ", A O E"
I agree in that sense, but then, you could have the reversed Dvorak instead.
instead of AOEI, it would be SNTH
so the keys would be arranged:
LRCGFYP . , '+/\
SNTHDUIEOA-
ZVWMBXKJQ;
Then WASD would be:
RSNT
Then ASDF would be:
SNTH
Hmmm, this would actually make hotkeys easier, so Control T, Control S, Control V, all that stuff would be accessible by your left hand.
Okay okay, we need this to be a thing, holy shit it's genius, reverse Dvorak.
Buffoonery Kavrod
Nice job and thanks for setting us straight about the reason for QWERTY. I too was under the misconception that QWERTY was developed to slow down the typist. We were not told that it was actually needed for mechanical reasons to prevent jamming.
I have decided, after all these years of typing and using a computer, that I am going to finally give the Dvorak keyboard a try. I may not be able to get used to having CTRL / Z, X, C, or V in other positions of the keyboard, but if that's too big a problem I guess I'll just have to go back to QWERTY.
The idea of QWERTY still being used just because it had been around so long and people were used to it reminds me of the U.S. attempting to convert to the Metric system in the 60's. But, oh how much better life would be if we had made the transition back then like other countries. My wife was raised in Japan and was educated in the imperial system, but later had to go through the painful process of switching over to metric. She said it was troublesome, but now she says that the imperial system is so difficult because she has gotten used to the metric system. So, the moral of the story is our human tendency for laziness is what makes it more difficult for us in the long run. If we would just bite the bullet we would be happier in the long run.
So, my point is - it's too bad that we didn't cave in to the Dvorak keyboard. We might have been better off.
Per the misconception about "QWERTY was developed to slow down the typist", I don't find the history all that helpful because compared to the Dvorak arrangement, the QWERTY arrangement does indeed slow the typist down.
It is like switching from SI-units to Imperial units - both work but SI-system is always superior.
***** It's laid out by frequency of use, so there are different Dvorak key layouts for programmers. Just tick it into google.
I switched to Dvorak years ago to stave off repetitive stress injuries that I was starting to notice the early signs of (as a programmer, it's an occupational hazard). It only took me about a month to get back up to my normal typing speed, but I probably had a slight advantage over most people though: I was, at the time, the type of nerd who spray painted my keyboard, so I was used to not seeing the keys. These days I just buy the keyboard blank to begin with. Anyway it worked and it was several years before signs of carpal tunnel started showing up again, at which point I invested in an Ergodox keyboard, which I of course have programmed to a Dvorak layout.
Now all that said my Ergodox does have a qwerty layer for gaming. Unfortunately there's just no way around it. Most games you can remap the controls easy enough, but every once in a while you'll come across one that you can't. And at work I have a standard keyboard sitting off to the side in case someone else has to use my computer.
I want to be a programmer (well, actually a software engineer) and I just made the switch to Dvorak today. Slowly getting the hang of it.
Oh yeah! Ergodox is the best.
Yeah, "the type of nerd who spray painted my keyboard". Been there, done that. I've been using Dvorak for a few years now. I'm not really that fast, but I was way slower with qwerty, mainly because I never learned. If you can't type, learning Dvorak first is a great idea and it's way easier than what the video claims. It does help using a trainer, like Klavaro, but it has to do more with training, as in "with your eyes closed", trying to feel where your fingers are and, last but not least, focusing while you learn.
What us a Ergodox, I can only see a ripped keyboard instead of one
yeah, it's that. :)
I learned Dvorak years ago as a necessity because of RSI. I had to slow my typing and so decided to hit two birds with one stone by learning Dvorak. I just used a normal QWERTY keyboard, but wrote the Dvorak keys on the side of the keys facing me. That way, if I forget the Dvorak key, I just need to raise my hand and look. I still use Dvorak to this day and type faster on it than I did on QWERTY previously.
*DOWN WITH Q!*
Think of the quiz shows!
The kuiz shows?
I love it!
And V. Fuck the V!
Der Ewige Wanderer
Thats a 'ery stupid idea
Trying Dvorak right now, I like the feel of it, but it will take some time to get used to
@@Bird9600 not much tbh. I'm left handed and feel like Dvorak favours the right a bit. I also use a lot of different languages, which makes it more complicated.
I switched to Dvorak. I started learning in September 2017, and my speed and accuracy are almost entirely back 6 months later. I think it was worth the switch. It was tough to retrain my muscle memory, and occasionally I will accidentally reach for the QWERTY position, but that has mostly stopped by now. I like this layout a lot better. It feels more natural on my hands, a lot less awkward stretches for commonly used "clusters" of certain letters. I recommend something like TypingClub or Mavis Beacon -- and a Model M keyboard!
That's what is frustrating about people saying it's not worth the hassle: you can't measure comfort and feel in a study with pure numbers. It may not get you much faster, but it will absolutely help you with your fingers and wrists tiring out all the time. I can't imagine going back to QWERTY.
what about azerti ?
It's azerty and still the standard in Belgium and France because they like to be different. It's probably more favorable to the French language even though the Flemish use it too. If you really wanna know more about azerty Wikipedia is your friend.
I moved from QWERTY to AZERTY 6 years ago, and I can tell you, even for the french language, AZERTY is horrible. Plus, it also has the inconvenience of being incapable of fully typing in other languages such as Portuguese because of a lack of one key that is present in all QWERTY keyboards.
Vindel Mauser
Yeah I have family in Belgium and their keyboards always freak me out. Weirdly enough the keyboards on their phones are often QWERTY (you have to manually change it to AZERTY and not everyone knows how to do that so they just learn typing QWERTY). Furthermore they speak Flemish (Dutch) so even if it was better for the French language it wouldn't be beneficial to them. Which key are you talking about?
Azerty, qwerty, qwertz,... they are all just as good it just depends on what you prefer and what you learn to type on.
And the reason that azerty is used by the flemish is that in the past french was superior and they wanted to be special so it was used in belgium and france and when we (flemish) became more superior, we already had a keyboard configuration and we didn’t change it.
-.-
what about DEZNUTS?
0:02 In the 1960's???? LOLCATZ 😂😂😆😆
yeah. 10 years before we landed on the moon.
I was able to convert my work PC, home PC and android keyboards to Dvorak all at once, which made immersion retraining a lot easier, took about 3 weeks to get the hang of it, that was 10 years ago after using QWERTY for 20. As for games and what not still expecting QWERTY, the Logitech G15 Keypad (or the Nostromo if you're a Razer fan) allows creating a "any key will do" or a remap back to QWERTY's WASD (or even ESDF if you prefer, I actually use SAWD/DSEF alignment myself for easier forward movement with less strain), you can then profile switch on the fly or make a complete per-game/genre set of profiles to switch to as needed.
I don't Qwerty OR Dvorak, I Colemak instead; it solves the ZXCV scrambling (by leaving it as is) and, consequently, focuses all of the letter keys back to the left so the right hand can keep on controlling the mouse, and that's the main downfall of Dvorak for me is that it's too much keyscrambling and too rightcentric.
What's more: ALL of the keys that the left and right hands control on a Qwerty, except for P and E, are controlled by the same hands as Colemak. No keys switch hands except for two of them between Qwerty and Colemak, but all but two keys (A and M) on a Dvorak (including comma, period, and slash) are scrambled on Dvorak.
+Ganaram Inukshuk I FOUND ANOTHER PERSON ON THIS EARTH WHO USES COLEMAK!!!!! BE MY FRIEND!!!!!!!!
+A Tapir Named Jeff Is the colemak community so small? My new keyboard is going to arrive tomorrow (US layout instead of german) and from then on I'll learn colemak. Are we friends now? x)
YES WE ARE FRIENDS!!!!!! What keyboard did you get?
I use Dvorak and I find your note rather interesting. I could see the advantage of having the left hand be dominate so to allow you to continue using the mouse bit I find that hard to see it work effectively. As a programmer I will stick with Dvorak not because it's better but because I use a lot of symbols so both hands are going to be busy regardless. Plus if you have it as a Windows language setting it does not affect key bindings for games and programs
Playing my games with
It's actually ,aoe
Funny, because AOE is one of the few games which definitely doesn't use WASD
been learning dvorak for a day and I am really slow at it still but I hope in the next few weeks I'll become much better at it
The typewriter was invented long before the 1960s.
Fuck it.
I'll stick to QWERTZ
Even tough this made me use Z as (yes on my Layout) my FPS prone bind.
MegaKosan Are you German or something?
***** Ja.
Raphael Beer I actually haven´t got these Problems.
Probably because im using it for 10 years
You know dont say swears
It's not about speed. It's about comfort. I've been using Dvorak exclusively for about 5 years - it's far more comfortable than qwerty. I use a standard qwerty keyboard and can type about 40 wpm either way. I'm typing this comment in Dvorak. Once you switch to Dvorak you'll never go back to qwerty. One problem though is that Windows will not let copy, cut and paste be mapped to anything but ctrl-c, ctrl-x and ctrl-v, so that's different keystrokes with Dvorak.
In my case, it's impossible for me to go Dvorak because I spent 13 years of my computer using life to not only type fast but also accurate to the point of not needing to look at the keys while typing.
It is possible. Almost all of us type the way you do, we could al do it if we gave it some (read: a lot) of time
You'd be surprised.
Implying being able to type without looking takes years to learn, or is hard.. lol..
I live in the Philippines and I see half of my classmates and friends had to look at the keyboard to type while the others are like me. One time, a few friends saw me type without looking and they were a bit amazed.
Vin the Hunter BEING TOP % OF COUNTRY B)
It seems like the design objective of QWERTY, to move the most common keys toward the outer edge of the keyboard, is also very desirable on a handheld device, especially a small thumb-operated touchscreen. So the ideal keyboard layout for PDAs and smartphones was invented more than a century ahead of time.
poisonhemlock Did your dumbass not pay ANY attention to the video. He clearly said that the most commonly used letters were placed in the center to prevent jamming. You probably didn't pay attention in school either and this is the reason your income is at the poverty level. Your entire comment is pure idiocy given what I have said. You're a fucking moron.
BewareTheIdes 0:44
BewareTheIdes pwnd
BewareTheIdes Hahahahahaha
BewareTheIdes your comment accurately sums up why people call the youtube comments a shithole. Gives the rest of us sane people a bad name.
I've gotten used to Dvorak. I just changed the layout completely and typed with that for a week.
Also I can still type on qwerty but at only half speed at most.
It's super weird playing wasd on Dvorak, but I manage.
Vim and emacs works just as badly on Dvorak as on qwerty, since their hotkeys are not designed to be consecutive anyway!
Well, what about the rest of the world that HAVE special characters like áâï, etc,
I did not see any of those on the dvorak layout.
They arent on QWERTY either so it doesn't really matter does it..
Dvorak is in majority for americans.
There are several (actually a lot. And some are really crazy too, look for the plover-layout!) other alternative keyboard layouts for different languages. Especially because several langauges use other letters more often than the other, etc. German for example has neo-layout as an alternative.
Luniii737 In Belgium (Where i live) they normally don't use QWERTY either but AZERTY instead, but I'm still using QWERTY because it seems more convenient.
i'm not saying the whole world should use Dvorak or any keyboard layout that isn't standard in their country right now.
***** Yes there are QWERTY keyboard layouts that contain special characters. The keyboard I'm using now for example has a nordic layout for the nordic countries. It's just the symbol keys on the right side that have been moved around. In their place are three new keys. My OS, which is set to norwegian, read them as ÆØÅ, but if I switch to any other nordic language, it will read them differently. ÄÖ are probably there for swedish users, etc.
For "Ö, Ä, Å" you need nordic keyboard layout
Win + Spacebar does wonders.
well done sir!
didn't do anything
A Koosha It's changes keyboard layouts. You must add more of them in keyboard options.
My favorite shortcut.
Mr. Rich B.O.B I hate control right shift. Always while I'm playing gmod.
Love your Channel's Accurate , Brief & Clear explainations on Thing that's Technical! ♥️🌷🕯
What's technical about this subject?
QWERTY Master Race
ABCDEF Master Race!
QWERTY Master Race.
QWERTZ Master Race
PC Master Race
Azerty master race
3:25 - Looks like a HowToBasic reaction to me.
I admit it probably took me 6 weeks to get to the point that I didn't have to think twice about Dvorak…but I didn't use a single typing tutor. There are dozens of free online typing tutors. I think it would have gone twice as fast if I had availed myself.
Honestly, the home row is so useful, you can master it in a week, and that's most of the job done right there. :-)
But, the world typing record is on the Dvorak Simplified Keyboard held by Barbara Blackburn, with 150 wpm for 50 minutes, and 170 wpm for shorter periods. Her top speed was 212 wpm, which is pretty fucking fast.
Actually, a lady named Stella Pajunas-Garnand reached 216 wpm in 1946 on an IBM Electric, which used Qwerty. Besides, if all wanted to be really fast, we would use those stenotype machines.
try giving your friend a go playing your computer in a stenograph layout. They'd be worse off than dvorak!
[Remember to delete this comment.]
A word is considered as any 5 letters. Test is not valid unless it is based on real prose.
Have you ever done a typing test? its not just how fast can you type letters with spaces between them. Most typing tests will give you random words ranging up to 10 or more letters and then when you are done with the test it will take the total characters you typed and divide it by 5 to get your WPM because the average overall length of words typed is 5 letters (I assume).
Switching from QWERTY to Dvorak is like switching from Imperial to Metric. Sure it makes more sense, but we just don't care.
orangeapples It's not the same because the Metric system is not just superior but also ubiquitous. Dvorak may be superior but nobody uses it. Imperial system is inferior AND nobody uses it.
0M9H4X imperial system is based on SI now, and has been for a while. look it up. they're equal more or less, and will be even more equal once the kilogram is based off a number instead of a decaying lump of matter.
Actually there are three countries that use the Imperial System: United States, Myanmar, and Liberia. Also Great Britan was the origin of the Imperial system, and the only reason they abandoned their own system was to gain access to the European market. Besides, why would we Americans want to use a French system. FYI everyone uses imperial clocks and an imperial calender.
Gregg Carter that is completely wrong. There are hundreds of different calendars in use around the world.
Actually no its completely right, and the only wrong things might be the calendar part. BTW how many of those hundreds of calendars have 12 months and how many of those hundreds of calendars do you use on a day to day basis.
I switched to Dvorak 5-7 years ago, and while the speed improvements are minor, the real advantage to the dvorak layout comes from comfort. It is hard to describe just how much more comfortable typing is when your fingers aren't flying all over the place. I still know QWERTY, but it has fallen to the wayside, and I cannot imagine going back. Typing for several hours in QWERTY is an absolute chore just because of how much more you move your fingers around.
Also, seeing someone else try to use your computer is not a downside to the dvorak layout. The look of befuddlement on their faces when the keys display the wrong letters is amazing.
On windows, cntrl-shift switches the layouts back and forth, so if, for whatever reason, I do need QWERTY, it is a keystroke away.
"Do we really need X? Or Q?"
Among Us room codes: yes, we need Q
Why is this so accurate lmao
When the imposter is sus! 😳
AMOGUS
Suprised that you never brought up the anecdote about how many of the top row characters aside from those placed there for the jamming reason are there so you can type out `Typewriter` using only the top row
PanikGrafik Mate, what i am saying is that the top row was made specifically for this. It was used in the demonstration of the new lay-out.
Lucky they specifically added a row that spelled the word typewriter, or we'd be fucked on a lot of important letters :O
Why do we use qwerty keyboards?
Answer: Some big business people just kinda looked at it while designing the typewriter and said "eh, good enough", influenced the entire market of typewriters and how people would use them, and now it's too hard to transition to something more efficient.
This makes me unreasonably angry
why?
true, which is why i'm learning dvorak, but It probably doesn't make a difference to most people. dvorak is better than qwerty, but people don't see anything wrong with it
Well I like to believe the more stress we put on our fingers, the faster we'll evolve to a version of humans capable to doing this stuff without carpal tunnel.
Unless your job requires you to type thousands of words per hour it doesn't really matter.
to be honest, Dvorak is overrated and I hate the typing style it gives off, not to mention it completely fucks the keyboard shortcuts.
If you want to try a keyboard layout that is actually better than qwerty, try colemak or workman.
The typewriter was invented waaaaaaaaay before the 60's
I use colemak, it's about as good as dvorak (maybe better?), but keeps as many keys as possible close to qwerty.
I can't confirm it's faster, but it's definitely way more comfortable and fun to type with. I went from 95WPM to 125WPM, but that's probably just from practicing typing
I forgot how to use any qwerty layouts though...
I like this host a lot. What is his name? Taren? I think i like him better than Slick. But not as much as Linus.
When I hear Dvorak I think Splinter Cell
Haha yes, the computers that Sam Fisher had to hack.
Re-learning keyboards with a Dvorak layout makes me feel what my grandma feels when typing with only her index finger.
I use AZERTY. :P
Really? I probably could not get used to that.
***** I can argue the same about QWERTY. It's just what you're used to.
Yeah. Do you also use that on your Nexus?
***** Nope, but I know my brother does on his iPads. Feels weird. xD
Lol
No x ? ok....
Hello my name is Ale :)))
+Alex Ban No, your name is Alecs
+Ariel Antunez We dont need the letter C either, so Aleks
+Alex Ban
ale?
you mean, like, the drinkable kind?
+Alex Ban Aleks or Alecks maybe
+Elrarion2 actually, you need the C , but no the K...english speaking people just need to start learning how to spell "C"...it's not "s"...
I switched to Dvorak a number of years ago. I struggled to learn it for the first week because I kept switching back and forth to Qwerty. I tried switching cold turkey and did a few online typing drills and it worked. I can still switch back and forth pretty fluidly when necessary.
Those who claim Dvorak is far faster, ignore the evidence against it. The fact is that, though you can technically be faster (proven mathematically), you're not going to be, because the most limiting factor, is not finger motion, but the speed of your brain. But if you analyze finger travel in Dvorak vs Qwerty, you'll find an insane difference (somewhere they claimed 5% of the distance traveled).
So no, you're not going to be faster, BUT, it will be smoother and more ergonomic; which does have evidence to back it up.
Wouldn't finger motion alone make you faster? I type fairly fast and I can tell you my brain spends most of it's time waiting for my fingers to reach the right keys. The typing is usually moving at about the same speed but my brain constantly has to stop and wait for my fingers to catch up to my running internal dictation. Also since Dvorak is supposedly designed for less errors, that means fewer typos and thus less redundant typing in order to correct mistakes.
For most people no, finger motion is not slowing them down. Most people who switch to Dvorak are not faster. Some are slightly faster but accredit it to the fact that they learn from scratch, fixing bad habits.
As you mistakes; Dvorak doesn't really help noticeably, and those speed tests would include time retyping mistakes.
For you, you may find yourself faster.
Fun Fact: the fastest typer in the world apparently uses Dvorak.
I actually prefer the Arensito layout ("www.pvv.org/~hakonhal/main.cgi/keyboard"). (Here's another useful page "patorjk.com/keyboard-layout-analyzer")
"Most people who switch to Dvorak are not faster"
Source?
Jonathan Levi Is this comment implying that most people can already type as fast as the human brain allows?
Because otherwise it doesn't make sense.
Unless I misunderstand.
The TYPEWRITER WAS INVENTED IN 1867. NOT 1960'S. Don't worry, you only got it wrong by 100 years. I wonder what else you said wrong......
Old video, but these layouts are heavily dependent on which language u type! In my language Swedish we use "our" weird letters a lot! So QWERTY/DVORAK is probably most relevant to the English language.
its really not that hard to learn a new language.. Americans are always stubborn to learn anything new or different
***** I'll just like your comment for the mathematical symbol.
I smell salt oozing from every pore of your body.