First things first. I do not want this to be a thread about whether the Dvorak keyboard is actually better than QWERTY. There is a TON of literature on the web from both sides. I've read a great deal ...
August Dvorak (1894-1975) dedicated his life to destroying the keyboard that you are almost certainly using right now. He hated the design that put the letters “QWERTY” in the upper left, scattered ...
IF you’re tired of typing on your iPhone you may be surprised to learn there’s a totally different keyboard that’s more comfortable. Not only that, it’s supposed to be much faster, but will take a bit ...
We explore alternative keymaps like Colemak and Dvorak to recommend the best one for you and discuss whether you should make ...
Alternative keyboards have been around for a long time, and while the traditional QWERTY keyboard won the fight, that doesn't mean the other layouts aren't worth considering. Advocates for alternative ...
As the topic states. I'm trying to find a good keyboard that I can buy from somewhere, pull the keys off, and rearrange into DVORAK configuration.<BR><BR>I currently have a Dell QuietKey that came ...
A few months ago Macworld asked where's the iPad's Dvorak keyboard? Well, in the iPhone SDK 3.2 Beta 5, which was released on Tuesday, there's support for hardware Dvorak keyboards in the OS; however, ...
Patented by August Dvorak in 1936, the Dvorak keyboard layout proposed a new way of typing based on the way that humans typically work, as opposed to the needs of mechanical typewriters (the reason ...
A keyboard layout designed in the 1930s by August Dvorak, University of Washington, and his brother-in-law, William Dealey. Almost 70% of all English words are typed on the home row compared to 32% ...
The Dvorak keyboard, which allows people who like Dvorak keyboards to type better, has found its way onto a MacBook courtesy of this simple copy-and-paste job on the physical keys. There are no ...
Fact of the day: the QWERTY keyboard is bad. It does not provide the best way to type. We've known this for a while, and yet we're still using it; the QWERTY keyboard, developed in 1868, has somehow ...