Just read this. Article that doesn't actually say that much. But the basic gist is that learning Dvorak helped the author learn to touch type. It helped being a different layout as they couldn't tear themselves away from hunt and pecking.
https://www.theverge.com/2019/2/17/1822 … ergonomics
"Dvorak made me faster almost entirely because it forced me to learn to touch type. For years I’d tried to do the same using a QWERTY layout, but when my old hunt-and-peck method was so easy to revert to I’d inevitably give up on touch typing when I needed to write something quickly. Dvorak was different. It forced me to learn to type properly, and eventually I did."
I borked my workstation the other day and was thrown onto the command line with Qwerty and felt totally stranded without a paddle. At times like that I then consider whether it's worth my time to learn Qwerty. Or to have a hard coded layout in a keyboard or via a device.
The above article did make me think that those that want to learn to touch type could even use Colemak as a route to Qwerty. Perhaps this is the most obscene and irrelevant but radical idea you have ever heard postured?
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Physicians deafen our ears with the Honorificabilitudinitatibus of their heavenly Panacaea, their sovereign Guiacum.