Let me preface this by saying that I hated Dvorak and have hated every other Dvorak-like layout I've tried. This probably means that Dvorak fans will hate this layout, because I really like it. But anyway:
kldy g q fbp;
rnht s u eoai
zxcv j w m,./
Pros:
* Row jumping (same-hand top-to-bottom and bottom-to-top) is very low (even lower than Colemak).
* Persistent same-finger (e.g., "UFJ" on Qwerty) is okay (better than Colemak).
* Finger load is well-balanced (each index finger does approximately the same amount of work, each middle finger, etc.).
* Much easier on the right pinky finger than Dvorak. Actually, is easier on the pinkies in general than either Colemak or Dvorak.
* Preserves most of the Qwerty bottom row (ZXCV and M,./).
* Actually scores well on that DDvorak test, unlike most of my layouts--is competitive with Colemak and Dvorak there. (In other words, it survives a "second opinion.") :)
* Feels really good to this picky typist. :)
Cons:
* Same-hand same-finger is rather high.
* Load on the index fingers is heavier than I would prefer compared to the middle fingers. The index fingers are together responsible for around 43% of all typing; the middle fingers, 22%.
* Moves more keys than Colemak.
I call it the Johnson layout because none of the rows spell out anything particularly compelling (and "Johnsok" just sounds--bad).
I've been slowly learning the layout. I'll report back when I hit 70 WPM with it, which seems to be the speed at which I feel "comfortable" with a layout. It actually feels like I should be able to beat my old Qwerty speed (~105 WPM) to a significant degree with it, but we'll see. So far, my main complaints are the positions of the "S" and "R" characters. Unfortunately, there's nothing for it--I tried my darnedest to fix those (and the same-finger), but all the reasonable "repairs" made the layout feel significantly worse (often because they moved "H", which is pretty much in the perfect spot: I believe "TH" is the most common digraph in English, and "THE" the most common trigraph; both are exceptionally easy to type on Johnson).