Koppla till Dvoraken skrivar orienteringen i XP
Du styrkan har ansett mottagligheten av dina wrists till den carpal tunnelen. Du kan är pröva att förhindra din invasive vänner och familj från att använda din PC, utan att se något liknande som du har något som ska döljas. Du kan är även pröva att avvärja av Alzheimers, genom avsiktligt att betvinga sig yourself till frustrationen av känslanågot liknande som du är fem gammala år igen.
Den Dvorak keyseten bistår sammanlagt av dessa strävan, och danande koppla är faktiskt långt lättare, än maskinskrivning med den möjliggj橬一j. För de är leken som gör koppla, här hur den har gjort.
Notera: Att koppla den din ska faktiskt flyttningen för skriva orienteringen stämm omkring, så du ska önskar att skriva ut ut en vägleda, för du gör faktiskt koppla. Läs för mer information Dvorak orienteringsartikel på Wikipedia.
Växling till Dvoraken skrivar orienteringen
Få sig yourself till kontrollbordet.

Klicka regionala och språkalternativ, när du är där dubbel.

Klicka på språkfliken.

Specificerar därefter.

Därefter vad du behöver att göra, är att klicka tillfoga knäppas. Notera strömmen US skrivar inställning.

Klicka skriva layout/IME boxas, när du är in där. Välj enigt Påstår-Dvorak från den dropdown menyn.

Klicka det REKO knäppas, och du ska tas tillbaka detta avskärmer. Nu emellertid, finns det tillägget av det enigt Påstår-Dvorak inställning.

Allt, som lämnas för att göra, är att välja den tappar uppifrån besegrar boxas, då applicerar hiten.

Du kan måste att starta den första tiden om igen, och du kan meddelas för din fönsterinstallationsCD, eller en nedladdning på något pekar under installationen. Följ precis betalningspåminnelserna, om så. Med lindra… väl, kanske i några veckor, då alla, som avslutas, dig ska skrivar smärtar fritt och.

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Impressive that that feature was built in there… although I wanted to bring up an article I can’t remember wherefrom anymore (I think from Wired) that showed that those claims of the Dvorak keyboard being more efficient than QWERTY are actually more wishful thinking than proper science.
D’oh! Two months late for April Fool’s Day. But I’m early for next year. [Rubs hands together greedily]. MWAHAHAHAHAAA!!
…
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I mean, I’m totally going to use it for the betterment of myself and coworkers.
Arvin,
There was an often quoted study done in the fifties where it was determined that it would be an inefficient tradeoff to train qwerty competent office workers in Dvorak, does this ring a bell? If so it was performed under fairly dubious circumstances. There’s a little bit of info about it on the Wikipedia page linked to above.
Unfortunately, I am not utilizing XP. Nonetheless, this post is exceptionally vital. I still utilize virtual keyboards.
Hang on, if you can’t touch type, that means having to stick something on your keys to remind you where they are.
Ha! I have to laugh at people who doubt the value of switching IMMEDIATELY to the Dvorak layout. Sticking with the QWERTY layout is like refusing to give up DOS.
Like most of you, I was quite young when I learned to type on QWERTY. What I didn’t know—did you?—is that QWERTY was designed to slow typists down so they wouldn’t jam the keys of early, primitive typewriters, over 100 years ago. It’s not just un-ergonomic; it’s ANTI-ergonomic!
I was a 65-word-per-minute QWERTY typist for 20 years. When I read about Dvorak, I switched, cold-turkey. I didn’t re-label my keycaps, or try to switch them around, or anything like that. (Remember, the whole idea of “touch” typing is not to look at your fingers.) Instead, I kept a small diagram of the Dvorak keyboard nearby, and consulted it only when necessary. (If any of you decide to switch, I highly recommend this method.)
In two weeks, I’d passed my previous typing speed. In two months, I was typing over 100 wpm.
The Dvorak layout is just a ton less work, too, because your fingers don’t have to travel nearly as far to reach the keys you use all the time. You’ll notice the comfort right away. You’ll realize how much unnecessary work you were doing.
I “auditioned” for a customer-support job a few weeks ago, and it included a typing test. Before starting, I opened the Windows Control Panel and switched to Dvorak. As I typed, my progress was monitored over the testing network. When I finished the test, I turned around—and three people from the office were standing in the doorway, trying to figure out how the heck I’d typed so fast. It was pretty funny. YOU can do this too!
So pay no attention to the skeptics. Switch to Dvorak, and never look back—except to laugh at the pokey 19th-century QWERTY typists you’re leaving in the dust!
I tell myself one day I shall have a computer that is dedicated to Dvorak keyboard…and I shall. So does anyone really use Dvorak layout in the world for day to day operation?
Learning DVORAK has been on my to-do list for years. I learned touch typing on a manual typewriter at home and an IBM Selectric at school, back at the advent of personal computers (I had a friend who built his own 8-bit kit computer around that time).
Personally, I think that since the DVORAK keyboard layout is now (actually has long been) built into windoze we should be insisting that all students learn DVORAK instead of QWERTY. As in-the-know and responsible parents, we should be setting up computers for our children to use DVORAK and making sure that the schools make it available. Asking that keyboard manufacturers dual label all keys wouldn’t be too much too.
You might want to note that on the logon screen if you have more than one keyboard defined there is a little button on the bottom left corner of the screen to select the one input language and keyboard layouts you want to use. Also, there is a languages button that you can have displayed in the task bar (I just can’t find how to enable it at the moment).