I posted in a forum that I belong to. Its at youneedabudget.com/ An awesome budgeting program but that's beside the point. On the forum their they have a off-topic forum where you can post anything. So I though I would spread the word on how awesome Colemak is. I will post the negative feedback from this guy below. The reason I post this it because I am not sure how to counter-attack his statements from his third paragraph. I hope Shai can help out or somebody else regarding these statements. These statements won't deter me at all. I have been a proud Colemak user for the past 2 years and still going strong.
Re: An awesome alternative to Qwerty and Dvorak typing!!!
by Patzer on Tue Jul 15, 2008 5:20 am
I think there's a gazillion studies on why Dvorak is superior to Qwerty. I know nothing about Colemak, but for the moment let me assume that Colemak is superior to Dvorak.
Colemak has no mass market future, for the same reason Dvorak never caught on in the mass market. There are too many Qwerty touch typists, such as myself. There are too many Qwerty keyboards, and people who teach themselves to transition from hunt and peck to two finger to six finger typing can get very fast on Qwerty keyboards. Most importantly, electronic keyboards require very little pressure from the fingers, so that even the weak pinky fingers don't get strained from frequently pressing very common keys such as shift, enter, \, and /.
The advantage that Dvorak had over Qwerty was apparent in the days of manual typewriters, where the finger muscles actually provided the power for the keys to strike the ribbon and transfer ink to the paper. (Anyone else remember those?) Novice typists had lighter p's and q's than j's and f's, because of the Qwerty layout and the relative strength of the fingers. Electronic typewriters cured most of that problem, and when computers became common enough to largely eliminate typewriters, it went away.
There was another phenomenon about the conversion from typewriters to word processors (and later, email) that worked against Dvorak: Qwerty keyboards were produced in mass, very cheap. Dvorak keyboards, being nonstandard, cost more. So Dvorak hardware never became widely available. There were various software packages to map the Qwerty keyboard to the Dvorak layout. While this software was helpful for people trained to touch type on Dvorak keyboards, the lack of Dvorak labeling on keys made it useless to people who weren't trained to touch type Dvorak. Add to that the fact that another layer of software translating keystrokes is more overhead on computers that we tend to load up until they crawl anyway, and the Dvorak translation software never became poplular. Even if someone loved Dvorak and put it on his own computer, and had no problems with the overhead of translations, he would still have to deal with employer-owned computers that only spoke Qwerty. Employers have a nasty habit of forbidding employees from making custom changes to their work computers.
All the reasons Dvorak never became common apply to Colemak as well. It doesn't really matter how much better Colemak is than Dvorak; it won't be able to fight the embedded base any better than Dvorak could. If you really like the Colemak layout, go ahead and use it; but don't expect it to become common or a standard.
Patzer