- MCP server with stdio transport for local use - Search episodes, transcripts, hosts, and series - 4,511 episodes with metadata and transcripts - Data loader with in-memory JSON storage 🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code) Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
97 lines
8.2 KiB
Plaintext
97 lines
8.2 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 4143
|
|
Title: HPR4143: Learning to touch-type using the Dvorak keyboard layout
|
|
Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr4143/hpr4143.mp3
|
|
Transcribed: 2025-10-25 20:11:50
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 4143 for Wednesday the 19th of June 2024.
|
|
Today's show is entitled Learning to Touch Type Using the Dwarwick Keyboard Layout.
|
|
It is hosted by Ennis Tello and is about nine minutes long.
|
|
It carries a clean flag.
|
|
The summary is why I chose Dwarwick and some tools I found useful.
|
|
Hello there, welcome to Hacker Public Radio, I'm Ennis Tello.
|
|
If you've ever thought about recording a podcast, the people at Hacker Public Radio would love to
|
|
take you up on it. It's a lot easier than you think and there are plenty of guides online
|
|
as to how to do it. In today's episode I want to talk about touch typing.
|
|
I've been learning to touch type over the last three months or so and I thought I'd share
|
|
some of my experiences and top tips for anyone who either wants to learn to touch type
|
|
or wants to speed up their typing. Now I've been typing for 40 odd years,
|
|
initially of course on a mechanical typewriter, then on to various electric type writers
|
|
and finally on to computers and I've always used the old method of hunt and peck which just
|
|
basically means look down at the keyboard and press the letters that you want and I've always
|
|
done that and I did a typing test on my speed using that method and found that I could usually
|
|
manage about 40 words a minute but given that I laughingly call myself a writer of some description
|
|
at least I write stuff for a living, I thought it was about time I learned to do this typing thing
|
|
properly for once and for all. Now the first problem I encountered was that part of my natural
|
|
muscle memory was looking down at the keyboard and so when I went through various typing tutors
|
|
trying to learn the quirky layout I found it very difficult and of course whenever there was
|
|
any situation in which I felt under pressure and I had to type quickly or just wanted to
|
|
bash out a response to an email or what have you. I'd look down and I found that very difficult
|
|
habit to break and my goal is to get to around 90 words a minute from my 40 so what I decided to do
|
|
was I was going to learn a different keyboard layout so I have been learning the Dvořák
|
|
keyboard layout and the reason for that is because if I'm in front of a keyboard touch typing
|
|
and the computer is set to accept the Dvořák keyboard even though I haven't changed my keycaps
|
|
around I'm still typing away on a quirky keyboard, a physical quirky keyboard. When I look down
|
|
there's no sort of handy label on the keys to tell me where to stab my stubby little fingers.
|
|
So what is the Dvořák keyboard? Well it was invented or developed by August Dvořák in 1936
|
|
and it was designed to ensure that typists had fewer finger movements when they were typing
|
|
than a traditional quirky layout. On the home row for instance the left hand's four fingers
|
|
cover the vowels left to right AOEU and the right hand's home row covers the most common
|
|
consonants which are SNT and H and other common key presses like P and C for instance are as close
|
|
as possible to the easy fingers which are your first finger and your little finger or pinky.
|
|
It's often said that the best typists in the world use the Dvořák keyboard because
|
|
you know it's in this way more efficient but I've not found any evidence one way or another
|
|
and it's largely contested. The key obviously to anything and the key to touch typing seems to be
|
|
practice learning to use the tools properly rather than thinking that the tools as are themselves
|
|
will produce results you know like buy a set of 10 grand golf clubs by paying or someone
|
|
and you'll play golf like Tiger Woods. Well you know you can invest in a Dvořák keyboard or a
|
|
fancy high-end mechanical keyboard and all of a sudden you'll be able to type faster while that's
|
|
not necessarily true. The thing I found was that just practicing is what sped me up and it doesn't
|
|
really matter what keyboard you're tapping away at. Now some sites that I went to
|
|
typing.com was the first site that got me going right at the top of .go results obviously
|
|
typing.com it's designed quite nicely it's highly congratulatory shall we say it's built
|
|
from what I can tell with school kids in mind you know there's lots of mention of classrooms and
|
|
a bunch of stars and anthropomorphic smiling computers and lots of use of the word awesome.
|
|
That might be your bag of course you can use a free account or you can throw them I think about
|
|
$10 or so for a paid-for account. Now the next site I tried was keyboard.com which is k-e-y-b-r.com
|
|
which is great definitely the best website I found. You can put into it as you can with typing.com
|
|
actually the fact that you're using coalmack or Dvořák or Quirty or Japanese keyboard.
|
|
Keyber.com starts you off with just a few keys and then when you're up to a certain
|
|
level of speed and accuracy it adds the next key into the mix so for instance it might start you
|
|
off with A, E, T and N and throw lots of words at you just using those letters then when you're
|
|
accurate enough and fast enough it'll add an extra key like S or U. Now the great thing about
|
|
keyboard.com is that it learns what combinations you're struggling with and what keys that it takes
|
|
you slightly longer to find than others and then tunes the drills that it throws at you
|
|
to concentrate on those weak points so it's quite focused and there are some really nice stats
|
|
pages too that the site offers you plus you can do a full on typing test you can compete against
|
|
others online. It's an incredibly multilingual site I think there are about 30 localisations
|
|
and I stumped up I think it was eight pounds ten dollars what have you to buy an account for that
|
|
particular site. In my various bits and pieces of research I also found a list of sites and
|
|
pieces of software that you can use to help improve your typing and I'll include that link in
|
|
the show notes some of them are a bit out of date I think I'm one of the sites that the listing
|
|
comprises of shareware and freeware which shows you quite how old the site might be.
|
|
Being an open source first type of chat I thought I'd look at open source software
|
|
one bit of software that I really like is called TYPE T-O-I-P-E and it's described as yet
|
|
another typing test but crab flavoured which it certainly is actually it works on Mac and Linux
|
|
and WSL in Windows it's written in Rust and licensed under MIT by default it uses the word
|
|
list which is built into the OS at least on Linux for its random words and it gives you speed
|
|
accuracy stats punctuation is optional which is handy and one of the options I found really handy
|
|
was that you can give TYPE your own word list so if there are letters which you find very troublesome
|
|
you can practice them separately and to create a list of words I went to another great site which
|
|
is called ingas anagram generator again links and show notes ingas anagram generator will create
|
|
a list of unique words from letters that you put in so your problem letters and then you can
|
|
create a word list from that and then point TYPE at that word list and do some extra practice
|
|
now like anything else typing speed improves with practice and I try and do an hours practice each day
|
|
as much as possible and I use the devorja keyboard now for every day work on my computers and to
|
|
give you an idea of time scale I started this project in March this year and as of now which is
|
|
beginning of June I can touch TYPE at about 40 to 50 words a minute so I'm already up to the
|
|
speed of my old hunting peck on a Quirty keyboard so I hope you found this podcast useful to you if
|
|
you're trying to learn to touch type or trying to speed up your typing have a look at the links
|
|
and happy practicing okay I think that's about all for today this is Anastelo signing off on Hacker
|
|
Public Radio you have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio does work
|
|
today's show was contributed by a HBR listener like yourself if you ever thought of recording
|
|
podcast you click on our contribute link to find out how easy it really is hosting for HBR has been
|
|
kindly provided by an honesthost.com the internet archive and our syncs.net unless otherwise
|
|
stated today's show is released under a creative commons attribution 4.0 international license
|