The arrangement of characters on a QWERTY keyboard was designed in 1868 by Christopher Sholes, the inventor of the typewriter. According to popular myth, Sholes arranged the keys in their odd fashion to prevent jamming on mechanical typewriters by separating commonly used letter combinations. However, there is no evidence to support this assertion, except that the arrangement does, in fact, inhibit fast typing.
With the emergence of ball-head electric typewriters and computer keyboards, on which jamming is not an issue, new keyboards designed for speed typing have been invented. The best-known is called a Dvorak keyboard. Despite their more rational designs, these new keyboards have not received wide acceptance.
2007-05-13 15:21:08
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answer #1
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answered by Insane 5
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This term is used to describe a standard (Latin alphabet-based) keyboard. Why? Because the first six keys in the upper-left part of the keyboard spell out Q-W-E-R-T-Y. I suppose you could call it a QWERTYUIOP keyboard, but QWERTY is a lot easier to say. In case you are wondering why the QWERTY keyboard is arranged like it is, the original reason was to reduce the jamming of typebars in typewriters as they moved to strike the paper.
In 1932, August Dvorak developed what was intended to be a more efficient keyboard, in which he placed the vowels and the five most common consonants in the middle row, based on the idea that an alternating rhythm would be established between the right and left hands. Though the keys on the Dvorak keyboard were more efficienty arranged, it was and still is too much of a pain for people to switch from the familiar QWERTY arrangement.
2007-05-13 15:20:38
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answer #2
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answered by Mystee_Rain 5
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It's honestly designed to make typing much less effortless. When they first invented typewriters, the letters have been organized alphabetically, however the typists grew to become so rapid they might style quicker than the desktop would print the letters at the web page, and the man or woman bars with the letters on them might get caught in combination, in order that they built the QWERTY keyboard considering the fact that you ought to style slower on them.
2016-09-05 19:08:18
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answer #3
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answered by sashi 4
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The letters are arranged which is freqently used, thats why it is in the order of qwerty.
2007-05-13 15:25:47
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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qwerty has been the standard for keyboards since the dawn of typewriters. its a easy to learn system for learning how to type blind..
2007-05-13 15:21:17
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answer #5
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answered by mikey29_70 3
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I'm not really sure why. Maybe it's an efficient design so that the keys are in a more efficient position for the fingers.
2007-05-13 15:21:09
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answer #6
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answered by Jamie 7
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