More Dvorak

Bonnie Allen bkallen at svn.net
Thu Jan 31 12:36:56 PST 2002


Learn to type without looking at the keyboard, and you'll be a better
typist. I've used Dvorak for years and have never bothered to change the
keys. As long as I don't look at the keyboard, I'm fine.

Bonnie

At 10:52 AM 1/31/02 -0800, you wrote:
>On Wed, Jan 23, 2002 at 11:57:16AM -0800, Warren Raquel wrote:
>> I was curious as to who in this group uses Dvorak mappings regularly.
>
>I have been using it for well over a year and a half now.  My wrists
>and hands love me, and as long as I don't overexpose myself to qwerty,
>I can type faster now than I could before.  I found a neat web page
>(http://www.karelia.com/abcd/abcd.html) that I used to help me learn
>Dvorak.
>
>I managed to get the company I was working for to purchase me a fancy
>ergonomic DvortyBoard (www.dvortyboards.com, about US$70).  It has a
>little switch in the corner that switches between Dvorak and qwerty,
>and has both letters on the keys (even for a and m).  I also have a
>collection of keyboards with the keys ripped up and rearranged,
>however the model I bought (from HSC, US$20) doesn't allow one to
>moved the J and the F, as they attach to the keyboard differently.
>
>Feel free to contact me if you want more info.
>
>-- 
>Brad Cox		brad at linuxbofh.com
>Key fingerprint = E741 589E 4A43 DA89 C5AA  B9A3 7E44 18BB C16B F62D
>Include me out.
>
>



More information about the talk mailing list