(no title)
ken | 5 years ago
The number 6 exemplifies the problem. Touch-typing classes teach that it's pressed by the right hand, but the number row has drifted so far left that it's actually closer to the left hand. Sure enough, (non-ortho) split keyboards can't agree which side of the split to put it on. Sometimes even different models from the same company disagree.
Staggered keys is even crazier, to me, than QWERTY. There's no spending 2 weeks relearning where every letter is. There's no messing up spatial mnemonics like Z/X/C/V. It just instantly fixes your fingers from being slightly out of alignment.
And the craziest is when touchscreens do it. Keys were only staggered in that funny way to make room for the keylevers. Computer keyboards never had keylevers, but touchscreens really never had keylevers!
IronBacon|5 years ago
Joking, I would say only Apple could find the "courage" to introduce columns staggered/ortholinear keyboards... ^__~
ken|5 years ago
hinkley|5 years ago
So the question is, do you move only your finger when reaching for the number line, or move your whole lower arm?
jupp0r|5 years ago
Same as querty: it’s there so typewriter stamps don’t hit each other.