Friday, December 30, 2011

DVORAK Day 2 Part 2

Learnt QJ WV. Very soon, I will be able to touch type with every letter!

The learning process was hard since I had to move my ring fingers. But I'm already feeling the effects of minimised finger movement! Or is that a placebo effect because I'm typing so slowly?

I noticed that every time I look at the keyboard, I typed slower.

DVORAK Day 2 Part 1

I'm more fluent with dvorak now. I'm now typing this out using touch typing, so I can familiarise with the keyboard. I still type horribly slow though.

Learnt .icd and kxbm, quite easy really.

The review for kxbm was really hard, as I had to use aoeuhtns, pyfg, .icd and kxbm to make proper sentences.

Thursday, December 29, 2011

DVORAK Day 1

Made the decision to switch from QWERTY to Dvorak today.

My brother and I repositioned all the keys on the keyboard, then pasted stickers on those that did not fit. [F, U, H, J]. They didn't fit because they had weird protrusions which made them able to fit each other only. Not sure why. Not sure why we repositioned the keys, too.

This program teaches you Dvorak pretty well. It teaches you how to touch type using your home keys.

Learnt aoeuhtns, 27 wpm. Was having trouble with H, T and N.
pyfg, 12 wpm (both after 3 tries on the practice and review).

Heard from this site that switching back and forth from QWERTY to Dvorak will result in confusion in your muscle memory.

"In this qwertified world [all computers have dvorak now], is it worth it to make the switch? Remember that you'll be developing a new set of "muscle memories", so it's very hard to unlearn qwerty and get used to dvorak. Also, do you ever use a keyboard other than your own? If you want to be able to use your friend's, coworker's, or library's computer, you'll have to still be able to type qwerty to do that, and it takes a lot of practice before you'll be able to switch at will. I used dvorak (and the occasional qwerty board) for over a year, and every time I had to change keyboards I typed with unbearable slowness, with generous use of the backspace key."

I still think that if you have the time, you should learn Dvorak.

How did I type this out then, if I'm not so proficient at Dvorak and want to use QWERTY? Copy and paste and hunt and type for letters.