QIDO: Physical Qwerty to Dvorak adapter.
Seems a bit expensive to me—at least for what it is. However, if you are looking for an easy way of switching a computer over without messing with settings (which some machine owners are touchy about), this might be your golden ticket.
ok - I decided to try again. This time I also popped the keys off my keyboard and rearranged them - the thing is, they were shaped for qwerty, so now they're all uneven. Plus the F and J keys and slots were sideways compared to the others - if that makes sense - it results in F, J, U and H being sideways. Basically my keyboard looks like an insane person built it. I'm still not 100% sure I should be doing this to myself...
DevotedSatellite333 recently commented →
I've been using Dvorak for over 7 months now. I've definitely reached, maybe even surpassed, my old QWERTY speed. I'm still extremely happy with my decision to switch. No more pains in my hands.
DevotedSatellite333 recently commented →
So do public place have Dvorak if you ask or do you have to use QWERTY?
Brett Buddin recently commented →
Ok - I'm trying it. Its painful and slow - but I can see already that there are alot more words coming out of just the home keys... we'll see how it goes. I think the most common keys are the hardest to re-program (o,e,t,n,s)
The Dvorak keyboard is an ergonomic alternative to the layout commonly found on typewriters and computers known as QWERTY.
Moderated by Brett Buddin
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