One downside I've found is CTRL+C and CTRL+V cannot be done with one hand anymore...
I've considered learning Dvorak, but then I realize that words-per-minute is not my bottleneck, so I'd be optimizing prematurely something that doesn't need optimizing.
(I'm not transcribing text - I'm programming. My bottleneck is how fast I can think of what I want to write next, not how fast I actually type it).
It's still something I'd like to learn in the future, though... just not as high a priority.
I think it's not only about WPM, but straining your hands less. At least when we talk about coding, all those reaches to } are not good...
Yes, that is precisely the point of dvorak.
Yeah but when we still look at the keys on QWERTY, making someone use an unfamiliar layout where the keys are not labelled properly just sounds painful. It would be awesome if the key-labels were LEDs that could change based on layout
It's a little frustrating at first - I'm forcing myself to type this post in dvorak. It's entirely possible, though, it's just a matter of dedication.
Technically speaking the LED thing is possible, but it would require a driver and cost a lot of money.
I think Ravyne might be hinting that it might not be possible to remap to dvorak everywhere (for instance, permission issues? I don't have first-hand accounts but I have used some locked-down computers were you could hardly change accessibility settings because "contact the administrator"). If you can't, it could be crippling in the short term.
ah, true, but you'd probably be able to type both in qwerty and dvorak, and use dvorak explicitly for programming.
"I would try to find halo source code by bungie best fps engine ever created, u see why call of duty loses speed due to its detail." -- GettingNifty