FWIW, I'm currently experimenting with a minimally non-QWERTY keyboard layout that I call QWERFY+. Basically it just involves taking QWERTY and swapping F<->T, and also J<->N, which feel like two swaps with big gains, and were suggested above by Phynboi. T is the second most common letter, and moving it to the F position eliminates an awkward reach that involves moving the whole hand. N is the 6th most common letter, and swapping it with the rarely used J puts it right next to the U, I and O keys with which it often appears in combination.
So, QWERFY+:
QWER F Y UIOP
ASDT G H NKL;
ZXCV B J M,./
I left the E where it is this time to avoid overloading the right middle finger. Plus I find in its QWERTY position it's actually pretty quick to type the common bigrams with ER, RE, ED, DE, TE and ET. And this arrangement feels like it's easy to learn since no keys move to a different finger. I didn't add Phynboi's R<->; suggestion since I think it's wrong to overload the right pinky which already has so much else to do.
This arrangement of course has many common keys on the top row and so won't satisfy purists...
Cheers!
Sy
Last edited by syperk (27-Jan-2009 18:19:42)