On Sun, Jul 21, 2024 at 04:48:19PM +0800, hlyg wrote:
On 7/21/24 02:33, Russell L. Harris wrote:
The same reasons the standard typewriter keyboard is QWERTY rather
than Dvorak:
= The precedent set by the first to market is powerful.
= The influence of advertising upon a populace lacking in discernment
and addicted to novelty is deadly.
Add to that extortion and bribes and a compromised legal system.
The QWERTY system was designed to slow down typists so as to reduce
the problem of jamming of keys of a poorly-designed mechanism.
is it possible to remap keyboard to??Dvorak in X Window? does anyone
use it to speed up typing?
ISO published a Dvorak standard, but it was compromised, for the top
(numeric) rows of keys were in the order 1234567890 . Dvorak has the
keys in the order 7531902468 .
For several years now, Debian has offered both the bastardized ISO
mapping ("US > Dvorak") and the original Dvorak arrangement ("US >
Dvorak Classic").
IBM manufactured a Selectric with the ISO Dvorak keyboard. This was
the original Selectric, not the Correcting Selectric II.
Back when I ran Window$, one or two keyboard manufacturers (I seem to
recall the name "Northgate") made Dvorak keyboards and even included a
set of Dvorak keycaps.
For me, a Macintosh guru changed the key mapping on a MacClassic to
Dvorak.
And long ago in Debian, with a bit of help, I managed to change the
key mapping file to Dvorak.
When in High School (A.D. 1963) I learned to type (QWERTY), the
typewriters in the classroom had blank keycaps. A layout chart was
hung on the wall in the front of the room. We learned to "touch
type," and were able to reach 95 words per minute.
I switched to Dvorak circa A.D. 1985, when I was given a project which
required much typing. I made learning Dvorak a matter of "swim or
sink." The first couple of weeks were painful, but within a month all
was well.
And when touch-typing, the labels on the keycaps do not matter. All
my keyboards are standard QWERTY.
In an office environment, the guy using Dvorak with a keyboard labeled
QWERTY has no worries about others messing with his computer.
RLH