Keyboard questions! Can you type without looking at the keys? Do you have a preferred format or make of keyboard?
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I had computer keyboards in mind when posting this, but players of the instrument are welcome to answer too
I use Dvorak btw
But yeah I touch type, but I often need to look to use qwerty when I'm on someone else's computer
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I had computer keyboards in mind when posting this, but players of the instrument are welcome to answer too
Yes, we had a computer lab in grade school that we would go to maybe once a week or once every two weeks. We learned qwerty and the teacher would cover your hands with paper so you couldn't look. It was infuriating at the time but once I learned it, I was set for life. I don't really think about it, it's just like speaking a language to me. For the most part I type properly but I have gotten into a strange habit of hitting delete with my middle finger instead of my pinky finger. No clue why/when that started and I have to reach over farther but now that's second nature as well. I recall if you got good enough you could play around on the games in Mavis Beacon!
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I had computer keyboards in mind when posting this, but players of the instrument are welcome to answer too
120 wpm peak; comfortably 100 with high accuracy. Playing online games with no mic had me typing fast. Then I got a heavy data entry job. Not winning competitions, but I'm pretty happy considering I don't follow the formal method.
I have a specific old Dell membrane keyboard I prefer over anything I've tried. Not a fan of mechanical keyboards. Tried blues and browns.
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Unfortunately, Iβve fallen down the rabbit hole and am looking into building my own
I feel you. I'm 'this' close to making my own trackball. Just uhh... as soon as I finish up some other non-computer projects first... damn time always doing the time thing.
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I had computer keyboards in mind when posting this, but players of the instrument are welcome to answer too
I use only 40% and 30% keyboards, thats ones without dedicated number or f key rows, and have done so for about six years now. Majority I use are standard stagger but a few are ortho or splits. Almost all of them that I like using are split space with left half as enter and the right as space.
I can touch type, although I am not the fastest, only a bit above 80wpm. This is mostly due to me being dyslexic so spelling is challenging for me and I can get bogged down looking up words or retyping it. If I do not give a shit about spelling I can easily get well over 100wpm.
I think the main show off skill I can do is look at a person I am talking to while typing a different conversation on the computer. Obviously I cannot do either if its complicated conversations but simple stuff is fine.
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I had computer keyboards in mind when posting this, but players of the instrument are welcome to answer too
Got tendonitis, so I used Kinesis Advantage for many years. Then the Glove80 came out, which I consider even better than any of the Kinesis Advantage, and I've had all models. And yes, I type without looking.
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I had computer keyboards in mind when posting this, but players of the instrument are welcome to answer too
Yes, I can touch-type.
I prefer colemak but abandoned it due to the prevalence of QWERTY.
I quite like 60% boards with tactile and clicky switches.
I've only used a few makes so i couldn't say if i preferred one over another. -
I had computer keyboards in mind when posting this, but players of the instrument are welcome to answer too
QWERTY at about 130-140 wpm, but not 10 finger. 10 finger ortholinear about 100 wpm, and about 90 wpm on staggered. As I was trying workman, I managed to type at about 50-60 wpm.
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I feel you. I'm 'this' close to making my own trackball. Just uhh... as soon as I finish up some other non-computer projects first... damn time always doing the time thing.
Well, the ploopy trackballs keep getting better
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I had computer keyboards in mind when posting this, but players of the instrument are welcome to answer too
One word: miryoku
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Well, the ploopy trackballs keep getting better
Ahh very neat. Though those prices are insanely steep... I also kinda' want a different button arrangement, button mechanisms, and ergonomics than any of their offerings.
Still a worthy suggestion for most, though!
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I had computer keyboards in mind when posting this, but players of the instrument are welcome to answer too
- Yes.
- I really enjoy my Ducky One 3 with Cherry MX brown switches.
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I had computer keyboards in mind when posting this, but players of the instrument are welcome to answer too
Yes, I touch-type, and use a kinesis advantage keyboard that makes touch typing "almost unavoidable" (as one blogger wrote). I also use the Dvorak layout, and get nearly 100 wpm without really trying (and using low-effort brain-to-keyboard data transfer is the way to go, imho).
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I had computer keyboards in mind when posting this, but players of the instrument are welcome to answer too
Been a touch typist for a while now, but I prefer my IBM Model M as a daily driver. I have a new modern take on the IBM Model F coming in in a few weeks that I'm very stoked about. Buckling spring switches are the best keyboard types ever made.
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I had computer keyboards in mind when posting this, but players of the instrument are welcome to answer too
- Yes
- HP DC7700 office desktop accessory keyboard. I had a stockpile of them but sadly I'm down to my last one
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I had computer keyboards in mind when posting this, but players of the instrument are welcome to answer too
wrote on last edited by [email protected]Yes, QWERTY at 110wpm with standard left hand and only using index and middle fingers on my right hand, on a normal ISO layout on my Wooting 80HE.