Hello, I'd like to talk about an issue mentioned in the Colemak FAQ - moving the backspace key while still using qwerty.
The FAQ suggests remapping the backspace key to capslock if sticking with qwerty, and it criticizes Dvorak for being lopsided to the right hand, which to my understanding is because although the letter-hand distribution on Colemak and Dvorak have been said to be similar, the placement of backspace on Colemak makes a major difference...
(together, this would mean that remapping capslock to backspace should work great on Dvorak, but I feel that's quite obvious so it's not what I'm eager to discuss)
...but qwerty is even more lopsided to the left than Dvorak is to the right. So, it seems to me that it would be just as good or better to remap backspace to an accessible key on the right hand.
Particularly since qwerty has semicolon/colon on a home key. However, people getting used to this might be undesirable.
Aside from people potentially having an extra hurdle in adjusting to Colemak, a potentially much bigger problem would be people getting accustomed to backspace being on a home key and feeling it has to be on a home key. The chance of it might not be very big, but if it happened, that seems very bad.
The solution that constraint pushes would be to bump apostrophe over onto semicolon, and put backspace where apostrophe was, the mirror position of its location on Colemak.
So, I'm trying to get some sort of perspective on how such habits might transfer over.