A further note regarding the typing test being biased. I replayed the top 10 scores for 30 sec, 1 min, and 2 min and found very few difficult sequences in any of the tests. For example, of the top 10 30 Second scores, here are the following uncommon words/sequences:
300
WONDERFUL
--
Tuxedo
nonzero
orthonormal
protocol
For the 10 Ten 1 Minute scores:
-
Toledo Ohio
?
un-American
--
!
Newark
300
!
?
Kentucky
--
?
?
wombats
tophats
?
Of course, these are spread out among the 10 different test scores, so we are talking perhaps 1-1.5 per test. I imagine that similar numbers would hold true for other users high scores, in that it is unlikely that a user's high score will have the following text in it:
Humor in the Court: Q: .......? A:
or
I/O, I/O, it's off to work we go
or
Tecumseh, (Shawnee) to his nephew Spemica Lawba 1790
or
Quark! Quark! Beware of the quantum duck!
or
It's is not, it isn't ain't, and it's it's, not it's, if you mean it is. If you don't, it's its. Then too, it's hers. It isn't her's. It isn't our's either. It's ours.......
The last one I have stumbled upon more than once. Whatever lead the writing of that one is beyond me, but it is shear madness. Thus, there are so many other things besides the heavy quotations (which seem to have come down) that tend to throw up stumbling blocks. The worst thing is when your on a run to come upon one of them such as some sentence ending with -Samuel Goldwyn. Not that that is particularly hard, but that when you see it coming, it acts to mentally through one off. Other stumbling blocks I have come across are:
High level of -- and ... (in fact it seems that almost every test I take includes at least one of either. when making my own layout and testing on your test, I was forced to assign the - to a better location because you use it soooo much.
weird contractions such as Heav'n
Non-words such as Whaddya, and tophats(?)
Linus: ......text here..... Snoopy: , or any other names replacing them such as Dustin Farnum: and Oliver Herford:
I/O, I/O its off to work we go. (I see your attempts at humor, and some of the normal sentences are funny, but this one is annoying
Fortune finishes the great quotations, #12..... (when I see this one coming up, it is disheartening and causes me to panic)
and here is a great one
What do you expect from a culture that *drives* on *parkways* and *parks* on *driveways*? Actually though, the Asterix is pretty easy to hit, but so what, seeing it coming up is a mental derailment waiting to happen.
In summary, I really do like the test and use it almost exclusively, but my question is, if all the high scores tend to be texts that are well balanced with lots of common words and very few if any odd punctuation or letter sequences, why have so many stumbling blocks like the examples above in the test? I wonder if I am the only one that clicks and clicks begin until the starting text that I can see looks reasonable, and also if I am the only one that stops many upon many tests midway through because up pops an absurd stumbling block that throws off my rhythm. I would much rather type texts with say, the first 5,000 to 10,000 most common words in English, arranged in sentences that make sense, and so be assured that everytime I click begin to start a new test, I am not going to come upon the dreaded,
It's is not, it isn't ain't, and it's it's, not it's, if you mean it is.....
string of text, or something else that serves to deflate my efforts.
Otherwise, great great typing test really. Love the new lengths, and the ability to set preferences. How about 3 min?