Well, for what it's worth, after a bit of trial and error and a few retries, I managed to type "the quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog" in QWERTY with very few mistakes (each one correctable with a bit more thinking and no looking down). It was pretty slow, but I did it--and I most definitely could *not* do that very easily (or as fast) on my first week and a half or even two weeks of Dvorak (too much confusion...)! So it is clearly still there--and honestly, it seems as if just remembering the problem keys (there aren't many) to prevent mistakes and then getting back to speed shouldn't be too hard. Surely more problem keys will pop up here and there in real typing--that's inevitable, but they'll go away with time.
It was relatively easy and effortless. It seemed to take the longest for me to think about and remember the V key's location for some reason and I mix the T/Y keys up frequently (did that at the beginning of Dvorak too due to their locations). There are a few other problem keys (D, G, B, N, sometimes Z...), but those seem to be the biggest. In actual typing, I may need to use a picture or look down at the keyboard as a guide at first, but even so I have a feeling it would all come back very quickly as I get the feel again for common letter sequences, and even then it still seems to be a bit faster than I was on my first week of Dvorak.
I'm just not so sure that layout is worthy at this point... but that little exercise had some nicely reassuring and interesting results. If I wanted, I could probably be back to a decent speed in a very short amount of time, and not lose Dvorak (or even touch the skills I've built up for it). Needless to say, though, I am typing this post on Dvorak, and much faster than I did that pangram in QWERTY. Maybe I will consider getting up to a decent QWERTY speed (35-40 WPM) for when absolutely required and for nostalgia purposes (ie. running FreeDOS in either DOSEmu or a virtual machine, or playing classic PC games in DOSBox), with the secondary benefit of using other computers very briefly or when unable to switch layouts. It would also provide a third benefit of keeping Colemak's and QGMLWB's symbol and punctuation keys in memory, and--even better--also make learning Colemak in the first place much easier. Hmmm... very tempting, actually. :)
So, there you go... it seems that what you "forget" can in fact easily be dug back up and re-practiced with minimal trouble, and with nowhere near the amount of confusion created by learning a new layout. They do also seem easily switchable in my mind. The major confusion seems to be typing in Dvorak, as I intend to, while forgetting to switch layouts in the operating system (or the exact reverse; typing in QWERTY as intended when forgetting to switch the computer to it). Now I'm just wondering whether I should bother fully re-acquiring my QWERTY abilities or not... it's actually kind of tempting, even if I have no intention of typing at my original speeds in it; I would rather use a more comfortable layout for higher speeds. It would also make typing "loadkeys dvorak" easier in Finnix and other Linux system rescue and maintenence CDs, which are of course all QWERTY by default.
Keep in mind, though, that Colemak has far fewer changed keys to remember, so you can likely get back up to speed after using it even faster.
Update: This seems to work so well, in fact, that it even brings back my old QWERTY bad habits and cheats that I tried to (and did) eliminate when I learned Dvorak, but they only affect me when I'm using QWERTY. I would probably try to "unlearn" those if possible before increasing my speed.
Last edited by UltraZelda64 (27-Jan-2013 00:42:58)