Path: utzoo!utgpu!jarvis.csri.toronto.edu!rutgers!tut.cis.ohio-state.edu!gem.mps.ohio-state.edu!ginosko!uunet!yale!Horne-Scott From: Horne-Scott@cs.yale.edu (Scott Horne) Newsgroups: comp.text Subject: Re: Dvorak Keyboard Layout Message-ID: <66814@yale-celray.yale.UUCP> Date: 19 Jul 89 04:37:33 GMT References: <3771@ursa-major.SPDCC.COM> Sender: root@yale.UUCP Reply-To: Horne-Scott@cs.yale.edu (Scott Horne) Organization: Yale University Computer Science Dept, New Haven, CT 06520-2158 Lines: 55 In-reply-to: weaver@spdcc.COM (Read Weaver) In article <3771@ursa-major.SPDCC.COM>, weaver@spdcc (Read Weaver) writes: > In article shoopak@topaz.rutgers.edu (Maverick) writes: > >Does anybody know the layout for the "Dovarac (sp?)" keyboard? > > > >It was before QWERTY, but too fast for manuals. > > Hmm. I don't think it was before qwerty, but yes, qwerty was designed > specifically to slow down typists (because the early machines jammed). QWERTY came long before Dvorak. Yes, QWERTY was designed to slow down typists to prevent them from jamming the machines. (It doesn't fulfill that purpose, though: I can jam a manual typewriter.) Oddly enough, some keys very often pressed in sequence are located next to each other (_e.g._, `e' and `r', `i' and `o'). So why aren't we all typing on Dvorak keyboards today, now that we have computer terminals that don't ``jam''? Old habits die hard.... Alas, alack.... > I've used the Dvorak layout for about a year and like it (tho' I haven't > found the rave testimonials to be borne out in my experience). (Too > bad it doesn't help with sentence structure.) ("It" meaning keyboard > layout.) (Someone stop me.) (My [frequent] nested parentheses [and brackets (and parentheses within brackets [and....])] aren't much better....) > The layout: (wish me luck). > > / , . P Y F G C R L > A O E U I D H T N S ; > ' Q J K X B M W V Z > > The shifted characters are /-? '-" ;-: > The top row stays the same ?????????????????????????? > The extra keys on computer keyboards stay the same (or change if you want) Does it really? I'm pretty sure that it looks something like 9 7 5 3 1 2 4 6 8 0 But I leave it as is on my Dvorak set-up (as well as the other punctuation marks, which are supposed to be in different positions from their QWERTY ones): since mine is the only DSK terminal that I use, I might as well modify it as I please.... --Scott Scott Horne Hacker-in-Chief, Yale CS Dept Facility horne@cs.Yale.edu ...!{harvard,cmcl2,decvax}!yale!horne Home: 203 789-0877 SnailMail: Box 7196 Yale Station, New Haven, CT 06520 Work: 203 432-1260 Summer residence: 175 Dwight St, New Haven, CT Dare I speak for the amorphous gallimaufry of intellectual thought called Yale?