Okay, I can roll with this.
I've used QWERTY for 16 years. Sequences like "SWEATERDRESSES" and "FASTED FADS" and "RECEDED" fell smooth and natural to me (no joke). A few months ago (before tinkering with multiple layouts), I could average 105 WPM on hi-games and 120 WPM on keybr's random sentences, no warm-up, no problem. While not world class, it'd be an understatement to say I just "got by." I could have been perfectly content typing QWERTY for the rest of my life, dismissing those who complained of awkwardness or pain as lazy, inexperienced, poor learners (if they stuck with QWERTY anyway), rebels without a clue (if they switched), too old, etc. (And I did for most of that 16 years.)
Clearly, since I have *16* years of experience with QWERTY--far more than anyone could possibly have with Colemak (and some of them can have opinions about that layout!)--that means I'm right! QWERTY must be smooth and comfortable to type on, because it is for me and I have so much experience to back me up! If you have a comparable length of experience and disagree, that just means you practiced wrong, or are rationalizing, or for some other reason aren't as good as me. :P
Or MAYBE, maybe it's that experience actually HIDES flaws from us! Maybe we get so used to those flaws and working around them that we become blind to them! Maybe our first impression is MORE accurate than our 365th impression because it's pure--untainted by habit (and other, less flattering mechanisms). Stuff like "you did not spend sufficient time to allow your motor skills and muscles to get accustomed" reads exactly to me like "just get used to the awkwardness and you won't notice it anymore!" Yeah, no kidding, I did exactly that with QWERTY. Do you really think that means the awkwardness doesn't exist?
Ever been writing the same paper for days and days, see it as grammatically flawless, and then hand it to someone to proofread and they find something like a repeated word in in the first sentence? (Ahem.) Same phenomenon. I'm sure the C and Java coders among us have stared at the same piece of buggy code for hours, seeing nothing but flawless code, yet when we hand the code to someone else, it turns out the bug was a comma instead of a semicolon, or missing braces on an if-statement (which was "properly indented"), or something of that nature. Same phenomenon. Ever see one of those parents in the supermarket with an unbearable child, yet the parent seems completely oblivious to it? Same thing. Ever hear a crappy song on the radio that you found yourself humming after the 50th time you heard it? Same. Was there ever some food or beverage you hated at first, but were forced (or forced yourself) to eat or drink, and you eventually developed a taste for it? Same. Been stuck some place with a horrible smell and eventually be unable to smell it? Same. Guess why companies spend millions of dollars to keep telling you day after day about their products. I mean, you heard them the first time, right?
Familiarity breeds acceptance.
Just something to think about.
EDIT: I acknowledge that further experience can REFINE one's opinions (e.g., adding new insights, exceptions to rules, etc.). What I do not accept is that one's first impression OF FLAWS is always wrong because those flaws tend to "disappear" with experience. As a rule of thumb, flaws ALWAYS tend to "disappear" with experience, because we get used to them and learn to ignore them (or, in some cases, even admire them).
Last edited by Phynnboi (24-Dec-2008 07:49:38)