[New user Lilleyt (Ted Lilley) just posted a post about his new layout into several topics including this one:]
Lilleyt: It seems to me that you've posted the same largish post over and over into at least 7 other topics that only partially relate to it! Why not make your own topic to discuss the layout you've made? It is an interesting layout proposal and I have some (hopefully constructive) feedback on it, but since I disagree with your tactics I'm not going to give that feedback in any of these topics. That would largely derail the topics, fragment the discussion of your new layout and generally cause mayhem I feel. If you make a separate topic for your layout I'll discuss it there.
One thing the Minimak layout does have to do with this topic is that it does indeed let you learn it one hand at a time! Its site claims that no other layout has that benefit; whether the above means that Colemak has it too or not is largely a technicality I feel. You can learn Minimak one hand at a time without displacing any keys which is nice.
Seems the spam filter chewed up all those identical posts yesterday (even their author is gone now)! Good thing too, as they kinda carpet-bombed a lot of topics. However, the layout itself seemed worth a discussion at least. Lacking a reposting from the Minimak layout author maybe we should discuss it a bit without him? :)
The Minimak layout, as seen on http://minimak.org/ [disclaimer: This isn't the final version of it as described on that site anymore!]
It's kinda ingenious to bring the necessary keys to the QWERTY home row like that; it's hard to envision a simpler solution. Makes for very easy learning - and if desirable, modular learning. The question is of course whether it's good enough.
I'd most certainly swap the N and J keys instead of putting the U down there in a too bad position and the J up there in a too good position! The impact on Vim should be minimal after all, and you'd move one less key. Also, the U-N digraph on the current Minimak layout needs special fingering and on most keyboards you could slide it instead if the U is one the upper row.
One argument I saw briefly yesterday [cevgar's] is that merely moving your hands to a home position that covers the upper row (i.e., resting your long digits between the rows) achieves most of what Minimak does without changing QWERTY at all! Maybe that's correct. I know that I rest my fingers on the upper edge of the RS and EI keys on Colemak, which makes the WF and UY keys easy to hit.
The main issue for me with this approach is that it seems to solve some letter frequency problems but does nothing significant about polygraphs! Same-finger digraphs on QWERTY should be same-finger digraphs on Minimak; and as said before I loathe same-finger digraphs! So I guess it'll only be a solution for someone who wants just a little change but maybe it's still too much ado for too little benefit? I know it is for me at least! ;)
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