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Keyboarding Love Or Keyboarding Pain

flyingember writes "Over on Ars, they've done the ultimate review for anyone who sits at a computer more than someone on AOL does, the IMAK Smart Gloves. These gloves are supposed to both prevent and help ease pain associated with conditions such as carpal tunnel syndrome. Read it to see if our code monkey enjoys the gloves or if they're just something for him to throw at the gawking crowd."

193 of 276 comments (clear)

  1. Yeah and by Cat_Byte · · Score: 2, Funny

    It also works well for beating the hell out of any key to continue. I think one of those pictures looks like a rat attacking a hand.

    --
    Two roads diverged in a wood, and I - I took the one the bus load of girls just went down.
    1. Re:Yeah and by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      also works well for beating other things. can anyone say repetitive motion injury?

    2. Re:Yeah and by grumpygrodyguy · · Score: 1, Redundant

      Mentioning beating, how are we supposed to jerk off with those things on?

      Thanks but I'll pass.

      --
      The government has a defect: it's potentially democratic. Corporations have no defect: they're pure tyrannies. -Chomsky
    3. Re:Yeah and by grumpygrodyguy · · Score: 2, Funny

      Much obliged for modding this redundant.

      Guess most slashdot readers already know this. My mistake.

      --
      The government has a defect: it's potentially democratic. Corporations have no defect: they're pure tyrannies. -Chomsky
    4. Re:Yeah and by Del+Vach · · Score: 1

      "All this computer hacking is making me thirsty!"

  2. Can it get any nerdier? by ekrout · · Score: 5, Funny

    Glasses? Check.
    Dorky parted hair? Check.
    High-pitched, nasally voice? Check.
    Skinny fragile body? Check.
    Computer gloves? Check.

    Sigh.

    So much for useful innovation...

    --

    If you celebrate Xmas, befriend me (538
    1. Re:Can it get any nerdier? by inode_buddha · · Score: 2

      This makes me wonder if it's possible to get carpal tunnel, etc. from spanking the monkey (http://www.monkeypoem.com)

      --
      C|N>K
    2. Re:Can it get any nerdier? by SmoothOperator · · Score: 1

      Yes. With a pocket protector in place.

      --

      Veni, vidi, vici.

    3. Re:Can it get any nerdier? by l810c · · Score: 2
      Slashdot? Check.

      Me.Duck

    4. Re:Can it get any nerdier? by MattCohn.com · · Score: 2, Funny

      Me.Duck

      Object oriented postings? Check.

      But seriously, at least he didn't start numbering his items from zero...

    5. Re:Can it get any nerdier? by cicatrix1 · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      ????. Check
      Profit!!. Check?

      --

      I know more than you drink.
    6. Re:Can it get any nerdier? by squarefish · · Score: 1, Redundant

      Pocket protector? Check.

      --
      Creationists are a lot like zombies. Slow, but powerful and numerous. And they all want to eat our brains.
    7. Re:Can it get any nerdier? by AndroidCat · · Score: 3, Funny

      Nerdy .. Slashdot
      Nerdier .. Using the email feature for when you get a reply or are modded.
      Nerdiest .. Noticing the replies or moderation before you get the email.

      --
      One line blog. I hear that they're called Twitters now.
    8. Re:Can it get any nerdier? by praedor · · Score: 2

      Of course. You should keep your back straight (posture!) and do not flip your wrist. Yes, yes, you may do a "better" job with a bent wrist but you are asking for RSI. Straighten your wrist, straighten your back, and you and your monkey will do fine even. Err, with regards to RSI. Can't do anything about the acquired blindness.

      --
      In Bushworld, they struggle to keep church and state separate in Iraq as they increasingly merge the two in America.
    9. Re:Can it get any nerdier? by juhaz · · Score: 1

      Never ever heard about a pocket protector before. And didn't know what it was for until I googled a bit.

      Is this solely US'ish custom or am I the only one that went "WTF is a pocket protector?"

    10. Re:Can it get any nerdier? by SmoothOperator · · Score: 1

      Are you serious? It is part of every stereotypical image of a nerd/geek.... Thick glasses, short sleeve button-down shirt with a gawdy tie, and a pocket protector in the breast pocket...

      Ah, an American cultural icon!

      --

      Veni, vidi, vici.

  3. This worked for me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    I had a moderate case of tendonitis from keyboarding and mousing about 2 years ago, and this thing does work.

    I like the fact that you can still bend your wrist as much as you want, but you are gently reminded that you are bending, so you eventually stop doing it. It's not constricting like those braces.

    1. Re:This worked for me by Sad+Loser · · Score: 4, Informative

      tendonitis is real, CTS is real, most doctors would say that RSI patients tend to be nutters.
      (IMHO, IAAD)
      rest and splinting are standared treatments for tendonitis and CTS. Use whatever works but CTS has a genetic component, and other diseases may also predispose you to it. CTS is not really classified as an 'overuse injury'in that overuse is not proven to cause it, although overuse may exacerbate the symptoms, if you appreciate the difference

      tendonitis is an overuse injury, and splinting, drugs like ibuprofen and steroid injections are all useful.

      --
      Humorous signatures are over-rated.
    2. Re:This worked for me by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      Yes, RSI is caused by the mind. I had RSI and now know the real reason:

      Yes, RSI has one unique cause, always.

      Just like asthma. And autism. And air crashes.

      I'm assuming that you aren't old enough to remember the bad old days when desks were too high, chairs too low, keyboards too thick & too stiff, etc etc. Try coding all day with your hands 3 inches below your chin and the monitor face 6 inches from your nose, with a PHB checking your LOC per day.

      Kids today, sheesh!

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    3. Re:This worked for me by juhaz · · Score: 1

      YOUR RSI, and many other cases might have psychosomatic cause, but that doesn't mean that it's always so.

      Human body IS fragile when it comes to things it's not designed to do, and people DO get wrist, and other problems from using computers too much, even if it's only a hobby without any emotional stress to cause psychic problems.

      World is not black and white.

  4. dvorak by YahoKa · · Score: 4, Insightful

    switching to dvorak would probably help more than theses gloves...

    1. Re:dvorak by CanadaDave · · Score: 4, Funny

      I never liked John Dvorak's stupid newspaper articles.

    2. re:dvorak by Elbows · · Score: 2, Informative

      Only if you have the time to adjust to it...
      I tried switching to Dvorak once, but I was spending like 4-5 hours a day at the computer, doing homework, talking on IM, etc. The result was a lot of tension and a lot of pain, and after a month there hadn't been a significant improvement so I gave it up.

      I might try it again someday if I could restrict my computer use to half an hour of typing practice each day, for 3-4 weeks (like that will ever happen)

    3. Re:dvorak by tigertigr · · Score: 1

      I never liked John Dvorak's stupid newspaper articles.

      Yes, but he's a hell of a typist!

    4. Re:dvorak by Graspee_Leemoor · · Score: 4, Informative

      Yes, I do roll out this story of mine every time, but here we go again.

      I switched to Dvorak layout AND touch typing from being a very fast (70wpm) 6-finger-looking-at-the-keyboard-qwerty guy.

      Not only that, but I switched right in the middle of a big VB project I was working on.

      For the first week it was amusing. I would have typed out half of a word and I'd be staring at the screen going "L- now where is it? erm erm erm- ah! Now, S.... erm..."

      I know that it would have better to do some sort of typing exercises or something to make the switch but I didn't want to be typing everything else in qwerty and getting myself confused.

      The results, after a couple of months were astonding: my RSI-like symptoms were gone and only come back slightly when I am forced to use a non-split keyboard. (Note that I can actually type faster these days on a non-split keyboard but it sure as hell isn't good for me).

      I am now up to about 70 wpm again which is only the same as before, I admit, but typing is a lot more comfortable and of course I don't have to look at the keyboard as I type, which increased my score in Typing of the Dead no end. (By the way, I totally recommend this game to people who want to practice Dvorak).

      I was amazed at myself in the end- not for the fact that I had got rid of my RSI-like symptoms, but because I had managed to achieve the same typing speed after only about 5 months that I had had with my old technique, which had been built up over about 20 years.

      graspee

    5. Re:dvorak by Starquake · · Score: 1

      I agree wholeheartedly. I just took a DB exam yesterday, and we had to use QWERTY keyboards because ITS at my school won't let you install anything useful. Long story short it hurt after about 10 minutes of typing. At home on my Dvorak keyboard, I can type for hours with no stress whatsoever. I recommend anyone with wrist strain (which I'm sure everyone has by now to some degree) switch to Dvorak. It takes some time to learn, but once you do it is *much* faster and easier than QWERTY.

    6. Re:dvorak by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 2, Interesting
      It takes some time to learn, but once you do it is *much* faster and easier than QWERTY.
      If it works for you, great, but the case isn't really that clear-cut. Studies show little or no difference.
      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    7. Re:dvorak by rleibman · · Score: 1

      Anectdotal, I know, but my experience mirrors yours very closely. Long live Dvorak keyboards!
      Now my biggest complaint of pain has to do with the stupid mouse wheel, which is VERY useful, but also a very unatural movement
      aoueidhtns!!!!!!
      I also speak Esperanto, vote Libertarian and use Linux.

    8. Re:dvorak by Doppler00 · · Score: 2

      I think more needs to be done to educate people about dvorak. If you know the dvorak layout, show it to people you know. From experience, it only takes abotu 2 weeks to learn and after that it's much easier to type. I've been able to convince 3 other people to learn the layout. If it can go from just a few people typing it -> a few thousand geeks -> it may eventually reach the main stream. This is really one of the few things that could really help improve user experience with computers if it is taught from the start.

    9. Re:dvorak by rywilly · · Score: 1

      I totally agree. I wouldn't have known about Dvorak if it wasn't for my high school science teacher, who had a Dvorak keyboard. I used to have a hard time typing, so I learned Dvorak in a matter of days, and after 2 weeks, I was typing faster than in Qwerty! It really is a more efficient layout, and people should know about it.

  5. This is great, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    What really would be good for the holidays....A stress ball! For all the time spent fixing their server!

  6. dirty mind by Twirlip+of+the+Mists · · Score: 5, Funny

    I admit it. I'm a big perv. But when I read "keyboarding love," I thought it was a new euphemism for cybersex.

    Man, that is flagrant false advertising.

    --

    I write in my journal
    1. Re:dirty mind by motardo · · Score: 4, Funny

      is that why your keys are sticky?

    2. Re:dirty mind by l810c · · Score: 5, Funny
      I admit it. I'm a big perv. But when I read "keyboarding love," I thought it was a new euphemism for cybersex

      It does hide the hair on your palm.

    3. Re:dirty mind by CanadaDave · · Score: 1, Troll

      Oh, I get it, because his hands got sweaty and the sweat got into the keyboard. That's a good one.

    4. Re:dirty mind by CoolVibe · · Score: 3, Funny

      As the title does mention keyboarding love _and_ pain, I though of S&M practices with keyboards first... Oh well

    5. Re:dirty mind by slide-rule · · Score: 1

      Relatedly, the first thing that came to my mind was...

      Person A: qwd43f1dvzs21sdfa1sdv....
      Person B: So you're a southpaw, eh?

  7. Geek Factor by Professor_Quail · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Was I the only one who thought this was going to be something cool and geeky since its on Slashdot? I was hoping it would be something like the P5 glove, except it would allow you to type in mid-air. I did read an article on something like that one time, but the last I heard it was just a prototype.

    1. Re:Geek Factor by blincoln · · Score: 2

      I can't be the only one who looked at that site and thought "I love the Power Glove, because it's bad!", can I?

      --
      "...always new atoms but always doing the same dance, remembering what the dance was yesterday." -Richard Feynman
  8. Gloves wont help. by packeteer · · Score: 2, Interesting

    A glove will either restrict your movement to keep you from moving in the wrong way which will cause physical stress from the unnatural movement. Or it wont restrict your movement at all and might jsut be uncomfortable. These gloves prevent you from moving your wrists wrong but even if it holds you wrist in place the muscles and tendons are still being strained as they try to move.

    --
    unzip; strip; touch; finger; mount; fsck; more; yes; unmount; sleep
    1. Re:Gloves wont help. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      maybe if you studied medicine you would know that splinting the wrist works to relieve tendonitis.

    2. Re:Gloves wont help. by alonsoac · · Score: 1

      someone up there said that the gloves don't actually keep you from moving but they remind you when you do move so you start doing it less. Which sounds logical to me.

    3. Re:Gloves wont help. by gCGBD · · Score: 1

      They certainly do help.

      I'm wearing the SoftFlex gloves even as I type this.

      They've been helping me reduce hand and wrist pain.

      --

      O=='=++
  9. Mouse Mitts? by kabir · · Score: 2

    These things look like a bean-bag version of Mouse Mitts, which have been around for years. While they aren't a panacea I have found the proper use of Mouse Mitts actually did help me out (though not in isolation, of course... it's always important to alter damaging behaviours, etc.).

    While the bean bag thing is interesting, really these don't look like anything new.

    --
    Behold the Power of Cheese!
  10. It's kinda hard by nuckin+futs · · Score: 3, Funny

    to masturbate while wearing that. isn't that why we're all in front of the computer? :P

    1. Re:It's kinda hard by CoolVibe · · Score: 1
      Yeah, but with THESE you won't get RSI or CTS when doing it. The pads 'n beads 'n stuff only add to the enjoyment I guess :)

      Didn't you see the hair that guy's palms? Oh wait duh... He was wairing the gloves

    2. Re:It's kinda hard by The+Snowman · · Score: 1

      to masturbate while wearing that. isn't that why we're all in front of the computer?

      While you're at work? And I take it you didn't get caught? Good job! Now tell me how you did it.

      --
      24 beers in a case, 24 hours in a day. Coincidence? I think not!
    3. Re:It's kinda hard by Digital11 · · Score: 1

      Lol, you mean you've never masturbated at work???...

      --
      I am a leaf on the wind. Watch how I soar.
    4. Re:It's kinda hard by CoolVibe · · Score: 1
      Good job! Now tell me how you did it.

      Well... You step into a vacated office, lock the door, close the window, boot up the workstation, load your favorite pr0n website and have a wank.

      There, mission acomplished! :)

  11. My solution by Devil's+BSD · · Score: 2

    Those things look a lot like like those sport grip glove things you see people at the Y wearing.
    But anyway, I found a "massager neck pillow" at a garage sale, and integrated the massaging unit into my wrist rest, so whenever I push down hard enough on the rest, it feels really nice. I don't know how much this helps prevent carpal tunnel syndrome compared to these gloves, but it sure feels good whenever my hands get tired.

    --
    I'm the Devil the Windows users warned you about.
    1. Re:My solution by rudedog · · Score: 2

      Xwrits is good, but Workrave is even better. It enforces periodic rest breaks like xwrits, plus it does timed microbreaks and a daily limit on typing. Plus, it's cross platform, so it runs on windows or Linux. Needs Gnome, though.

    2. Re:My solution by //-izer · · Score: 1

      I use xwrits too. But it isn't necessary to get a splinting device like "smart gloves". Handeze gloves have been around for years (see google) and can be found at many chain pharmacies in the ace bandage section. When combined with frequent breaks and stretching, it holds the RSI at bay.

    3. Re:My solution by sn0wcrash · · Score: 1

      Regular breaks are a must. I suggest smoking... but only outside. Your nicotine desire will force your butt out the door to take a 5-10 minute break regularly so you can burn one. Works for my anyhow!

      Which rmeinds me...

    4. Re:My solution by bandy · · Score: 1
      Hm.... RSI or lung Cancer?


      Tough choice.

      --
      "You might as well get your son a ticket to hell as give him a five string banjo." -unknown minister
  12. link? by Nate+Fox · · Score: 2, Informative

    how bout a link to the actual article?

  13. From the review... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    The heels of the gloves contain a pocket of beads

    Bring on the pr0n, baby, bring on the pr0n!!! I sure hope these gloves are washable!

  14. Couple this with Dvorak... by MattRog · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Also try switching to Dvorak.

    You probably won't be any faster, but your fingers *will* travel less. I know I used to have pain in my hands after long coding sessions at work on Querty - after switching to Dvorak I can say I have regained my previous speed (after three months or so) and long coding sessions no longer produce painful fingers!

    Of course, you should see your doctor immediately upon RSI-type pain.

    --

    Thanks,
    --
    Matt
    1. Re:Couple this with Dvorak... by CanadaDave · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Is it tough to go back to Qwerty, once you've mastered Dvorak? I mean, if I go a friend's computer (without Dvorak setting turned on) and start typing, am I going to be able to remember the Qwerty style?

    2. Re:Couple this with Dvorak... by Fizgig · · Score: 2, Interesting

      You'll feel a little frustrated at first, but for a week after you've mastered Dvorak, practice 50/50 Dvorak/QWERTY and after that you'll be set. I have a few seconds of confusion at a new keyboard, but other than that, it's fine.

    3. Re:Couple this with Dvorak... by MattRog · · Score: 4, Interesting

      It depends on how often you switch back and forth. If I go a long time (a month) I sit there like an idiot in front of the keyboard hunting and pecking for a while until I can remember.

      If you regularly use QUERTY there should be no problem, really. Of course, if your friend uses Windows 2000/XP it is incredibly easy to temporarily change to Dvorak and back. That's what I end up doing if I need to use another computer for any length of time.

      The problem comes into play when playing some games - most Quake derivatives (Half-Life, Medal of Honor: Allied Assault, etc.) use hard-coded Querty key layouts, so your keys revert back to Querty. Just something to keep in mind.

      --

      Thanks,
      --
      Matt
    4. Re:Couple this with Dvorak... by IIRCAFAIKIANAL · · Score: 3, Informative

      At least you are making a claim about Dvorak that perhaps makes sense (contrary to popular belief, Dvorak layout does not lead to superior typing speeds - see this) - has anyone researched whether Dvorak would help with RSI's? No offence to the parent, but I can't just go on one anecodote here :)

      I personally can't switch as I need to be able to sit down on anyones PC and just start typing... I don't seem to get RSI pain at all, but I'm sure it will start in a few years, given I am a gamer and a programmer...

      --
      Robots are everywhere, and they eat old people's medicine for fuel.
    5. Re:Couple this with Dvorak... by Steve+X · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Early on in my second year at college,my hands had been tingling from too many late nights, days, and afternoons coding and chatting. I started to get freaked out (I mean, really, where's a coder if his hands are dead?). So I switched to Dvorak.

      Dovrak is wonderful - much less finger travel and a better balance of the hands (try typing english words with just your left hand vs. just your right hand in qwerty and you'll see what i mean). But Dvorak alone won't help you.

      The most important thing I found about switching from Qwerty to Dvorak is that I actually learned to touch type properly. Not having an actual Dvorak keyboard to look at the keys, I simply stopped looking as I typed and started relearning how to touch type. Mind you, I could touch type in Qwerty, but not fingers-on-homerow, actually-using-your-pinkeys typing.

      It was the proper relearning that I think really made my hands stop hurting. My fingers move substantially less than my poor Qwerty skills and as such, less strain from long finger reaches.

      Many people I encounter say, "oh, i'd learn Dvorak but then i could never use anyone else's computer" or "it'd take too long to learn" Yeah, it's true: it does take dedication. One can't just sit down in front of a Dvorak keyboard, not knowing it, and not get frustrated trying to type in real-time conversations.

      I found the best way to learn was to type class notes. That way, not only was I only limited by my own speed (not the speed of the conversation), but it provided good incentive to type faster (more notes).

      As for switching between the two: this is also a challenge, but well-worth overcoming. I kept getting confused at first which key was what in which mapping, but over time, I eventually got used to them as seperate layouts and my brain formed a nice distinction between the two. I can still type about as fast in Qwerty as I could before (though, honestly, i havn't tried recently), and I can type as fast, if not faster, in Dvorak.

    6. Re:Couple this with Dvorak... by kirkjobsluder · · Score: 2

      Dvorak may help some cases but it depends on exactly which bad typing habit causes the problem. Dvorak has not helped me much because I learned to type back on typewriters that required a much firmer touch. As a result I tend to be a "pounder" unless I think very hard about typing.

      Basically my experience with RSI is that there is no "one size fits all" solution.

    7. Re:Couple this with Dvorak... by Idarubicin · · Score: 1
      I know I used to have pain in my hands after long coding sessions at work on Querty...

      The biggest problem is the long reach to the backspace key. After developing carpal tunnel syndrome, it's just not worth the trouble to reach over and retype QWERTY correctly.

      How hard is it to spell, really? You just have to roll your hand across the top row of the keyboard...

      --
      ~Idarubicin
    8. Re:Couple this with Dvorak... by MattRog · · Score: 5, Informative

      Correct, most "Dvorak is faster than Qwerty" claims are not based on fact. Theoretically, though, your fingers travel less so perhaps you can type faster. I haven't coded Qwerty in a long time so I do not know what speeds are, but I am confident I am no slower.

      Most RSI help claims are, of course, anecdotal, but from what I have seen virtually everyone who has switched has seen vast improvements in comfort - that I can't ignore.

      A short list of pros and cons are here:
      http://www.mwbrooks.com/dvorak/procon.html

      Note that no claims of speed superiority are made - most speed claims are made by uninformed converts and not by evangelists.

      --

      Thanks,
      --
      Matt
    9. Re:Couple this with Dvorak... by MattRog · · Score: 2

      No, because I do not use Qwerty (duh). :rolls eyes:

      I actually just caught it on my previous post because I was spell checking it in Word.

      --

      Thanks,
      --
      Matt
    10. Re:Couple this with Dvorak... by toddestan · · Score: 1

      Hehe, first post.

      Anyway, I switched to Dvorak close to three years ago now. My advice is to get an old IBM Model M keyboard. Besides the fact that they are simply the best keyboards ever made, the removable keycaps means that you can make a Dvorak board in about 10 minutes. It looks great, and can be switched back to Qwerty in about 10 minutes if you are so inclined.

      As for switching over, it's really tough at first. The first fews days I could not type a paragraph in less than 5 minutes. But after a couple of weeks I was banging away. Now that I have used my board for several years, I have found I am silghtly faster, at typing - but with much fewer errors - so the resulting speed is considerably greater. And basically no physical stress after long typing sessions.

      As for switching back and forth, when I first switched over I did not use Qwerty very much, so when I was confronted with any other computer in the planet my typing speed was awful. Gradually, I relearned Qwerty and can type at a reasonable speed on it now, but with tons of errors (my fingers have a tendency to hunt out the Dvorak location for keys) I even tried keeping my lesser used computer as Qwerty as practice, but switched it over recently as it was driving me absolutely nuts. (I can't stand Qwerty anymore, my fingers feel like they are doing some awkward dance every time I use one now)

      Also, the Dvorak board is also good for other things, like the look of people's faces when they sit down in front of your computer. And it's also a great security feature too. Oh yeah, if you do this at work your coworkers will hate you.

    11. Re:Couple this with Dvorak... by Sludge · · Score: 4, Funny

      It's alright, sometimes I forgek ,jgij mdkjsh Gqm ktrglu gl alh G ysoudk ks pssv ak kjd mslgkso yso a ,jgpde

    12. Re:Couple this with Dvorak... by MattRog · · Score: 1

      All apologies on the repeated misspellings of QWERTY. I subliminally think "QU" and type it as such. :(

      --

      Thanks,
      --
      Matt
    13. Re:Couple this with Dvorak... by juju2112 · · Score: 2

      I junt switched to dvorak a few days ago. I'm still pretty slow, but I am getting faster much more quickly than I would have expected. Anyway, I don't forsee any problem going back and forth. All you have to do is go into the control panel and change your keyboard settings. And if you're on Linux, just type 'loadkeys dvorak' in the console and 'setxkbmap -layout dvorak' in X. It's pretty simple.

      The strange thing is the fear in people's eyes when you change their keyboard layout. Like you won't be able to change it back or something. It really frightens them.

    14. Re:Couple this with Dvorak... by lazelank · · Score: 1

      please tell me that you typed this with dvorak. cause if you misspelled qwerty on a qwerty keyboard..

    15. Re:Couple this with Dvorak... by darxpryte · · Score: 1
      This may get a redundant but I just wanted to pitch in as a dvorak typist primarily. I currently switch between using my TiBook and my Kinesis keyboard at work (who's interestingly enough in the same business park as I am). I use Dvorak on both of them.

      If you don't use Qwerty much you *will* forget it if you don't use it for 4 months or so. This happened in my case. However, like not using a second language after learning it, it's easier to pick up again which I had to do after starting a new job. I'd equate typing both Qwerty and Dvorak a lot like knowing two languages. Since I have to use Querty from time to time to admin other systems, I've still retained it, but I'm much better at (and prefer) Dvorak.

      Since I make a living from being able to type well, CTS scares the hell out of me so I've not bothered trying to going back to Qwerty. Plus like other people said, your fingers move a lot less when you type Dvorak. It also has the nice added bonus of people less frequently trying to "borrow" my computer when I'm not using it.

    16. Re:Couple this with Dvorak... by tigertigr · · Score: 1

      ,jgij mdkjsh Gqm ktrglu gl alh G ysoudk ks pssv ak kjd mslgkso yso a ,jgpde

      Please tell me this is just gibberish, or I will be forced to write a shell script that maps Dvorak chars to Qwerty chars. It's gibberish, right? Please, God, let it be gibberish!!

    17. Re:Couple this with Dvorak... by Darkforge · · Score: 2

      Please tell me this is just gibberish, or I will be forced to write a shell script that maps Dvorak chars to Qwerty chars. It's gibberish, right? Please, God, let it be gibberish!!

      Nope. It's Dvorak, alright. It's nothing exciting. It just says:

      which method I'm typing on and I forget to look at the monitor for a while.

      Hslqk ysoudk ks hoglv tsfo S.apkgld! z)

      --

      When I moderate, I only use "-1, Overrated". That way, I never get meta-moderated!

    18. Re:Couple this with Dvorak... by Jester99 · · Score: 3, Informative

      Uhm... Just one correction: in Half-Life, you can bind your controls to anything you'd like. Unreal Tournament is the same.

      I think most modern games allow you to rebind your keys; everyone has their own "perfect" layout and they want it just a bit different.

    19. Re:Couple this with Dvorak... by tdegruyl · · Score: 1

      Yeah, after a while, it is just like working on a keyboard with the control key in the wrong place (below shift, that is). You get used to switching, but you still make mistakes.

    20. Re:Couple this with Dvorak... by LegendLength · · Score: 2, Informative

      I think what he is saying is binding to the 'Q' key in Half-Life will bind to the top left physical key regardless of whether you are in Qwerty or Dvorak mode.

    21. Re:Couple this with Dvorak... by stype · · Score: 2

      I probably went a year without typing qwerty, once I started using dvorak. It took me a couple minutes to get used to qwerty again, but I can still type just as fast as I used to. Its kind of weird too....when I picked up dvorak, I started typing more correctly...ie, fingers on home row, using the correct fingers to hit the keys. When I go back to qwerty, I still use only about 2 fingers on each hand and fly all over the place just like I used to. Switching keyboards is a fun mental experiment.

      For fun, try remapping caps lock to backspace and vice versa. That alone will screw you up for a while, but is worth it in the long run. (til you use another keyboard).

      --
      -Stype
      Bus error -- driver executed.
    22. Re:Couple this with Dvorak... by x1048576 · · Score: 1
      At least you are making a claim about Dvorak that perhaps makes sense (contrary to popular belief, Dvorak layout does not lead to superior typing speeds - see this)
      However, those guys get so carried away debunking the claim that Dvorak is much faster that they go too far and claim that Dvorak isn't any faster. The best estimate is that Dvorak is 5-10% faster. See this 1982 Usenet posting from Don Norman or read his book The Design of Everyday Things. Heck, read the book anyway.

      As for Dvorak and keyboard pain, I don't think there have been any scientific studies, but lots of people think it does help and often any sort of change helps RSIs.

    23. Re:Couple this with Dvorak... by Spoing · · Score: 1

      I can't speak about Dvorak to Qwerty, though I have worked conferences where there were a few different keyboards (UK, Belgian, German) and after a short bit of practice I could switch between them fluidly.

      --
      A firewall can not protect you from yourself. Turn off what you do not need. Do not use the firewall to do your work.
    24. Re:Couple this with Dvorak... by IIRCAFAIKIANAL · · Score: 2

      Yes, the article I linked says that there could be a marginal (5%) improvement in typing speed for average people but for expert typists, switching to dvorak did not increase their speed.

      --
      Robots are everywhere, and they eat old people's medicine for fuel.
    25. Re:Couple this with Dvorak... by orasio · · Score: 1

      I dont know why all that fuss about interchangeable keycaps in IBM keyboard. Most low-end keyboards let you interchange their keys, you just need to pull harder. About the microswitch thing, I find its noise very annoying, mostly when I am not the one using it.

    26. Re:Couple this with Dvorak... by frunch · · Score: 1

      Figuring out that your fingers travel much less in dvorak isn't tough. Just take the number of times you type each bigram in the english language (on average), and multiply each by the distance your fingers have to travel to reach that combination. (For example, TH requires no finger movement in dvorak, but movement by both index fingers in qwerty).

      What I can't understand are all these claims that "oh sure, you can move your hands less, but that doesn't mean you'll type faster". If you only have to drive your car 5 miles, instead of 10, you're going to get to your destination faster.

    27. Re:Couple this with Dvorak... by x1048576 · · Score: 1

      But Don Norman says that Dvorak is 5-10% faster than Qwerty for experts. And he is an expert on this stuff, unlike the authors of your article.

    28. Re:Couple this with Dvorak... by SuperPedro · · Score: 1

      Translation: "don't forget to drink your Ovaltine! ;)"

      That sig's a lousy commercial!

      Hahaha... Dang, now I'm bored again. lame. :(

      --
      Most sigs are dumb. This is one of them.
    29. Re:Couple this with Dvorak... by Doppler00 · · Score: 2

      No it is not difficult to switch between the two. I still type 40wpm in QWERTY and it only takes my mind about a second to switch between the two. The only problem I ever have with dvorak is when co-workers who try to use my computer :)

    30. Re:Couple this with Dvorak... by Doppler00 · · Score: 1

      It is possible to switch to dvorak and still retain your ability to use QWERTY. Just don't try switching between the two often while you are learning.

      BTW, the article you posted is often cited as a reason why dvorak is not better. However, I believe that more substantial research needs to be carried out, as this article is mostly opinion.

  15. News? by Flamesplash · · Score: 2

    If I'm not mistaken wrist splints/supports that aim to keep the wrist from moving are old news, and alone an ineffective solution. I think one of the best things to do is get a split keyboard of some kind. This alone helped my RSI out within days.

    --
    "Not knowing when the dawn will come, I open every door." - Emily Dickinson
    1. Re:News? by JVert · · Score: 1

      I agree, I tried wrist support for a few weeks, while fighting with them my symptoms eased from lack of typing (time well spent restrapping velcro). Requested an ergo at work and got one at home at the same time. It took I think 2 weeks to adjust completly, and even still I think i'm down 5wpm but I dont miss it at all. Per day I can type alot more now then I could with those "flat" keyboards. Which makes me realize, keystrokes are time, time is money, slashdot isn't free afterall!! (grrr, i'm still not used to this ontopic thing...)
      Go ergo keyboard!

    2. Re:News? by japhmi · · Score: 1
      Odd, my doctor told me that the fancy split keyboards are actually worse for CTS. They make your wrists bend upwards while typing. I found comfort with my wrist braces and having one gell-filled rest in front of the keyboard. The best way to type is supposedly to have the keyboard tilting town and away from you so your wrists fall onto it in a natural position.


      I also got 2 cortisone injections which makes things better, and I only have to wear the braces when I'm doing heavy typing. I'm also much more careful with things, because you can only have 3 injections before they start talking surgery.

      --
      "Giving money and power to government is like giving whiskey and car keys to teenage boys" P. J. O'Rourke
  16. This has been around for um... 10 years? by JVert · · Score: 1

    Nothing new here, move on.
    These can be had at wallmart for $10.
    These could have been had for many years now...
    And yes she looks very comforatble holding her eyebrow with her thumb, try drinking coffee when you can't bend your wrists.

  17. cheaper alternative by kuroth · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Pick up a pair of wrist braces at the local drug store. Much cheaper, and they do the same thing.

    1. Re:cheaper alternative by rudedog · · Score: 2

      Hmm, the "cheaper" alternative at CVS is $19.99, while the smart glove from the article is $19.95. Have you considered a remedial math course?

    2. Re:cheaper alternative by kuroth · · Score: 1

      It costs $8 to get the IMAK to my house. I can stop at a CVS on the way home for nothing.

      Cheaper.

    3. Re:cheaper alternative by Kazimira · · Score: 1

      You can also go to your local sporting goods store and looks at their braces. I picked up one at Sports Auth with similar features for under $20.
      It had top and bottom braces which are removable and 3 velcro straps for adjustments.
      It's not a cure but it does help.

    4. Re:cheaper alternative by rudedog · · Score: 2

      Umm, you posted a correction to your original comment, saying "you want one that goes around the thumb", and linking to the following item:

      Futuro Wrist Brace Left
      Large
      1 EA
      $19.99

      Not a pair, not $4.99.

    5. Re:cheaper alternative by kuroth · · Score: 1

      That wasn't me posting AC.

      You're forgetting about shipping costs, like I said. You can probably buy the plain 'o beige-and-velcro within four minutes of your home, instead of sending away for it. You can also probably find a it cheaper than $20.

  18. The REAL solution to carpal tunnel syndrome... by OverRated · · Score: 4, Funny

    Obligatory UserFriendly comic.

  19. Sorry, wrong one by kuroth · · Score: 1

    You'll want the one that goes around the thumb, here.

  20. Uhhh is this just an advertisment or something? by Tmack · · Score: 1
    Or is there really something "Smart" about neopreen wrist wraps? I bought something similar many months ago at Wall-Mart for less than $10, the only difference is I didnt opt for the removable splint (removable strip of metal), as my wrist was sore from a Mtn Biking injury, not actually broken (as it was when I was 9ish, and then the brace I got did have it). Looks to me like just an advertising ploy.

    TM

    --
    Support TBI Research: http://www.raisinhope.org
  21. Braces are bad by skwelch · · Score: 1, Informative

    I just stopped wearing a wrist brace to protect my thumb after a motorcycle accident (and no, airbags wouldn't have done much for me), but all it seemed to do is force my wrist straight at the expense of the rest of my body. Some decent form and posture seems like a much better way to help yourself.

  22. this might seem off-the-wall... by nido · · Score: 5, Interesting

    ...but if your computer is causing you pain, I speak the truth:

    1. check your insulin levels (no, it's not about diabetes)
    2. learn how to relax (body asleep/mind awake)
    3. get some exercise
    It's taken me three years to put this puzzle together, and that first point is probably the most important (I learned it last week, and cutting out the carbohydrates has already started to make a difference). email me if you need more guidance, i'll be happy to dish out some knowledge..

    links:
    on the subject of insulin - invert the frickin food pyramid
    why relaxin' is important - and some suggestions for getting started
    the exercise one - well, that one's kinda obvious, but is worthless without the other two.

    --
    Learn the rules so you know how to break them properly.
    www.teslabox.com
    1. Re:this might seem off-the-wall... by RantRant · · Score: 1

      Exercise is key. I added wrists to my weight lifting routine and haven't had any problems since. My personal theory is that the resulting increased blood flow and strengthened muscles are better able to recover from the strains of typing all day.

  23. Get some weights. Lift them. by xtal · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I had some minor problems with wrists and my thumb that were really annoying. I used microsoft ergo keyboards, but they're not popular anymore and I needed a replacement. I got a good quality normal one. I've used the really nice IBM monsters in the past, still have one in fact.. but my girlfriend can hear it across the house, so that's not a long term option. *click click click*

    The solution for me was when I started lifting weights.. the problems just went away. Get some free weights and a curl bar, cut back on the typing for a little while and then give it 6 months of 20 minutes three times a week. You'll look better, be stronger, and I bet your RSI will be better, too.

    And stop typing when it hurts!

    --
    ..don't panic
    1. Re:Get some weights. Lift them. by shepd · · Score: 1

      >Get some free weights and a curl bar, cut back on the typing for a little while and then give it 6 months of 20 minutes three times a week. You'll look better, be stronger, and I bet your RSI will be better, too.

      Or learn to type on a manual typewriter. Well, it might not make you look better or get you very strong, but you didn't hear anything 'bout RSI on those.

      Of course, a side effect is the fact that any keyboard that isn't built like a tank will be destroyed in no time. This can be good if you're in a cheap workplace and prefer a clean keyboard.

      --
      If you could be told what you can see or read, then it follows that you could be told what to say or think - BoC
    2. Re:Get some weights. Lift them. by kiddailey · · Score: 1

      I actually have to agree with this -- it's really kind of obvious: exercise is good for you.

      I used to get a lot of regular exercise, but too much work and my own business have changed that and I started experiencing problems when typing at the keyboard and using the mouse.

      My hunch was that over the years my wrists/hands/forearms had some of lost their strength, so I went to Walmart, got a couple of 10pounders and started using them for a few minutes each day.

      I had less to no pain almost immediately.

      As xtal said, don't type when it hurts. And don't forget to take breaks often!

  24. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  25. Good posture helped me. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    My ex-boss (who had CTS surgery) noticed I was having serious pain one day and suggested I change my posture. This involved several things:

    1) Elevating my arms above my keyboard
    Having my arms below my keyboard resulted in my wrists resting on the desk or keyboard and puting more pressure on the tendan (sp?). This can simply be done by raising your chair or lowering your keyboard.

    2) Elevating my monitor above my keyboard. Having both the monitor and they keyboard on the same level resulted in my head being pointed down and my arms raised up. In general this is bad.

    3) Having my legs at a 90 degree angle. That is your chair should be at the correct height so that your legs come straight down at a 90 degree angle.

    4) Not slouching back. This is soooooo bad for your back. If you have a chair that allows you to lean back, make sure to stick it up right and in place. Slouching will result in lower back pain..

    In general sitting at a computer all day writing code is bad for your health. Poor circulation and repetitive motion is not good. Take some time to make sure your workstation is setup ergonomically and it will improve whatever work related pain is ailing you. In aidditon splits do help, at least they helped me. I have to say though, just setting my workstation up right did more help than any doctor or splint.

    1. Re:Good posture helped me. by angeles13 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Good posture is definately a way to help prevent problems in the wrists and hands. One way that I make sure that I sit correctly is corsets (yes -- I am serious, corsets). It is very difficult to slouch or scrunch up in a chair when one has bones (steel not whale) poking into one's waist and back. The laced up garments are perfect for working at the computer for eight or more hours.

      As for pains in the wrists, I don't know how many of the guys are going to do this, but I knit during my lunch hour. After being diagnoised with carpel tunnel in both wrists and serious ulnar nerve irritation in one - knitting and crochet have stopped the pain and have kept me from having to have surgery.

      --
      design is art - art is design
  26. There is No Such Thing by ecolitalks · · Score: 1

    Just a pair of gloves that can fix all your problems? That is nonsense. Just think about basically, it just fix your wrest and make it the right position which also means that when you need bend it, you will need use more strength and in return, your muscle hurt more. It will only make thing worse not better. Just as the author said, he religiously wore the gloves. That how the gloves work! Religious is the important word here.

    1. Re:There is No Such Thing by japhmi · · Score: 1

      Except with CTS and other RSI injuries it's not the muscle that we're worried about, it's the tendons.

      --
      "Giving money and power to government is like giving whiskey and car keys to teenage boys" P. J. O'Rourke
  27. Re:Offtopic, but appropriate Google link... by joejoejoejoe · · Score: 1

    I had a couple of failed page loads.

    Then later it was up, but around 10:45pm-11:20pm I could not login, and a lot of pages like search, user, just redirected back to the home page...

    Obviously something was up. Check this thread, nothing got posted for nearly an hour. I tried a 'reply' link, while not logged in, and it just went back to the home page too.

    So yeah, something was whacked out.

    --
    Silly Rabbit: tricks are for kids.
  28. Watch out for medical advice... like THIS advice: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative
    Two things:

    1. Over in Ars Technica's forum someone named Figa made an excellent point:

    Ars Technica shouldn't be recommending medical devices to its readership, even if they're over-the-counter. I hate to think how many people will go out and buy the things instead of seeking medical advice, hoping that their pain will go away.

    My doctor warned me to avoid splints specifically because they can weaken your wrists, especially if they're worn 24-7 as the author recommends. Think about what happens to muscles when you wear a cast. They atrophy!

    There was a lot of lousy advice in the forum as well, which I can attest to firsthand...

    Figa (quoted above) then proceeded to explain why other people's advice was bad and then gave a 15 point treatment plan :)

    That said, if you're going to self-medicate with gadgetry, my vote would be to check out Kinesis's Contoured Keyboards

    The keys are arranged in lines in pits in the shell of the key board. Your fingers naturally droop into the pits and then move forward and backward (rarely to the sides) to depress the appropriate key.

    Claimed to make the activity of typing simulate CTS reducing exercises. I have a co-worker who has one and loves it.

  29. not my arms/wrist... by bonezed · · Score: 1
    no problems with the arms/wrists etc (unless i spend all day playing games). But my back (center left) is extremely painful, already spent large sums of money at the chiro...


    atm, a regualr massage is all that seems to help :(

    --
    ---- Put Sig here:
  30. hehe by Tuxinatorium · · Score: 1

    When I saw the topic I thought it might have something to do with a new type of S&M involving keyboards...

  31. My solution by Schemer · · Score: 5, Informative

    My solution to wrist pain has been to use a break reminder program like xwrits to remind me to take a 5 minute break for every hour of computer use. I would use those five minutes to get out of my chair and walk around for a while, so not only was I resting my hands, but my whole body as well.

    It's also a good idea to look out the window at something distant while taking your breaks, you can avoid eye strain by not focusing on something 18 inches from your head all the time.

    JWZ has some good advice about this stuff on his site which I found very useful.

    --
    A buddhist walks up to a hot dog stand and says ``Make me one with everything.''
  32. IMAK vs. iMac by Daleks · · Score: 2

    Wait 'til Apple hears about this. Lawyers attack!

  33. Re:Watch out for medical advice... like THIS advic by dubbreak · · Score: 1

    wow impressive. from the site: -Select 24, 36, or 48 macros (56, 38, or 28 characters long, respectively)
    -Switch between QWERTY and Dvorak layouts on the fly!
    -The embedded keypad offers maximum productivity and comfort for 10-key users, especially using a foot switch.

    so can i use the footswitch to hide the pRon when the boss comes in? very nice indeed. I think i need a big foot keyboard so i can get some exercise for once.

    --
    "If you are going through hell, keep going." - Winston Churchill
  34. There are real solutions by nonameisgood · · Score: 3, Informative

    At the risk of being too serious for this crowd - three things cause hand pain commonly (mis-)diagnosed as carpal tunnel 1) neck problems - very specific diagnosis, but think of it as a pinched nerve 2) shoulder problems - "thoracic outlet syndrome" now more often called "neurovascular compression syndrome" primarily due to holding arm up and/or out, as in mousing - specifically spasm of the subscapularis muscle - push your fingers up under your shoulder blade at your armpit - it will elicit the same pain 3) forearm muscle problems - primarily due to prolonged forearm twisting (screwdriving, etc.) and sometimes sports. These things seem to be carpal tunnel to diagnosticians (read most MD's). They need professional treatment and/or work position changes or they will get worse. If you have true carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS), the gloves in question will ease the pain at the expense of healing, since the typical nighttime hand pain in CTS is due to blood flow and the healing process. For CTS, weights or rubber bands used to strengthen the extensor muscles (back of the hands and arms) will fix many cases of true CTS. Don't let CTS go untreated as it can become permanent if it remains uncorrected. #1 priority in all cases should be workplace changes to prevent damage.

    --
    Faith is the very antithesis of reason, injudiciousness a critical component of spiritual devotion. Jon Krakauer
  35. pain? by Spudnewt · · Score: 1

    are these gloves really necessary? I've been using computers for years, and it seems that only the first few times i used a keyboard excessively were the only times when my fingers hurt. (other than the times ive had my fingers stapled, slammed, etc)

    when it comes down to it all, i think proper typing 'stance' and posture are the key to painless keyboard use.

  36. Quotes from satisfied customers: by pctainto · · Score: 1

    "When I first learned, my boyfriend didn't show me the proper technique. I have sense developed CTS and now I can't satisfy my boyfriend near as well. Thanks to these gloves, I can go on for hours, without the slightest pain in my wrist. Both my boyfriend and I are happy now." -Colleen, Age 18

    Or, the geek...
    "I used to hide the bishop 2 or 3 times a day. I developed a bad case of CTS due to my strange posture, since I was trying to hide what I was doing under the keyboard. The gloves have worked wonders and I can now make the bald man puke more efficiently and with less pain. Thanks IMAK!"

    --
    I think my principles are reachin' an all time low
  37. Don't cough up the cash by xygorn · · Score: 2, Informative

    For those of you too cheap to cough up the cash, an excellent weapon against RSI is simple exercises. Every five to ten minutes of typing, stretch your fingers as wide as you can for a couple seconds, then clench your fists as tight as you can for a couple seconds. Repeat a few times.

    This works best as a preventative measure, but also helps lessen the pain if you already have RSI problems

    --
    I am a sig. I wish I were a more creative sig, but I am not. I guess everyone has something to strive for.
    1. Re:Don't cough up the cash by slide-rule · · Score: 1

      In addition to the finger stretches (see parent), here's a nice wrist stretch: put your hands (palms) together in front of you, fingers pointed away and hands touching chest. Keeping your hands together and arms in the same general position, rotate them so the fingers point upward to the ceiling for a couple seconds, then rotate them so that the fingers point downward to the floor for a couple seconds. Repeat. (I could also recommend a number of wrist exercises we do in Aikido, but they're too tricky to explain in flat text.)

    2. Re:Don't cough up the cash by qengho · · Score: 2

      an excellent weapon against RSI is simple exercises

      More exercises, as well as good ergonomic info, can be found in this poster from TidBITS. I used to distribute copies to co-workers, back when I had a real job.

  38. I feel his pain - solved with MS Natural kybd by Call+Me+Black+Cloud · · Score: 3, Informative

    I was having problems with numbness and a little pain in one wrist. I switched to MS Natural Keyboard at home and work and I don't have the problem any longer. I think it's because the Natural keyboard keeps my wrists straight whereas before they would be canted to the left and right (using a "normal" keyboard").

    1. Re:I feel his pain - solved with MS Natural kybd by Call+Me+Black+Cloud · · Score: 2

      Silly troll, the brand of the keyboard is germane as not all "natural" keyboard are the same. Different angle, different slope. I was just reporting what worked for me.

      Now go post somewhere else. Here, let me give you a start:

      In Soviet Russia, keyboards make Linux!

  39. When's the extreme coding comp? by Keylarn · · Score: 1

    With all the wrist braces and elbow braces that IMAK is selling, combined with the plethora of case mods available out there I have to wonder when is the first telecast of the Extreme Coding competitions going to be on TV? Will there be replays of the geeks who's hands sieze up? And most importantly will this make it easier for geeks to get chicks?

  40. The TIME.. by katalyst · · Score: 2

    Magazine featured a list of the almost available gadgets that will revolutionize the way we live. This article was featured in a late Nov issue. Of the featured gadgets, one was a projected keyboard. It consisted of this tiny projector/sensor which projects the image of a keyboard on a flat surface. As your finders touch the kyes(or rather the image of the keys), the sensor, by calculating the position of ure finger would know which key you are pressing. Now that's technology !! And no strain. These gloves look ergonamic all rite, but I would prefer this projected keyboard system.

    --
    |/________
    |\A|ALYS|
  41. I use something very similar to this. by AtariDatacenter · · Score: 3, Informative

    I got it from the doctor because of carpal tunnel like problems. (Insurance paid for a paid, even.) It has two velcro straps (which are tied to the glove kind of like shoelaces) which hold it on the arm. When I wear the glove, zero pain or problem whatsoever.

    If I wear the glove for a few months time, all my problems disappear. But they'll eventually come back if I stop wearing them. So, now adays, I wear it as a preventative measure, and it really works great.

    HINT: You might want to wash it on a regular basis, and you might want to have a backup pair for while it is being washed. Or two to switch between on a regular basis.

  42. It's not new by jsse · · Score: 1

    Doesn't it sound so familiar?

  43. Re:Couple this with Dvorak... AND A VISUAL EDITOR! by QuietRiot · · Score: 3, Informative
    Vi in Dvorak? Anyone? Anyone? Anyone? Bueller. Bueller.

    How is it?

    Training tools for learing this fanciful new keyboard layout? Anyone? Anyone?

    Want to switch Ctrl and Caps Lock? Make your h's into m's or 6's into 9's? Be sure to check out jwz's XKeyCaps. You can rewire your primary input device to your heart's content. From the site...

    xkeycaps is a graphical front-end to xmodmap. It opens a window that looks like a keyboard; moving the mouse over a key shows what KeySyms and Modifier bits that key generates. Clicking on a key simulates KeyPress/KeyRelease events on the window of your choice. It is possible to change the KeySyms and Modifiers generated by a key through a mouse-based interface. This program can also write an input file for xmodmap to recreate your changes in future sessions.

    Nice home page Jamie. (BTW This is the guy behind everybody's favorite collection of screen hacks, XScreenSaver, the DNA Lounge and an explanation of cut and paste in X, among other things .)

  44. A zero-cost solution that works by r55man · · Score: 3, Informative

    I often type for over 12 hours a day--not 12 hour workdays, but 12 hours of actually banging at the keyboard. I used to get really bad cramps in my forearms and shoulders that would totally incapacitate me for a day or two at a time. Because I'm too poor to afford any high-tech gadgets (split keyboards and such), I had to come up with a cheap solution.

    What I did was to put a four books on the table and use one of those "natural" keyboards that have the keys at an angle. The four books are positioned in a way that the top two hang over the base of the keyboard, and nearly butt right up against the space bar. The books are angled so the base of my palms sits on the corners, and my wrists end up being perfectly level and aligned with my forearms. Also, the books are fairly thick, so my fingers kind of "hang down" onto the keys. These are large (long and wide) hardbacks, large enough so my elbows are also resting on them, and the net result is to take all of the strain off of my forearms and shoulders.

    Since my shoulders no longer have to do any work to hold my arms in place, and my forearms no longer have to do any work to maneuver my wrists, all of the pain has disappeared. I've done several consecutive 16-hour days of coding without feeling much of anything at all, and have never even felt close to the point where I'm too sore to type.

    I actually suspect that a lot of the so-called "RSI" is not so much due to repition as it is due to the stress of holding ones arms and wrists in a certain position for hours at a time. If you've ever tried to hold a couple of heavy books with your arms perfectly straight for any length of time you'll know that the pain eventually becomes fiery and unbearable, and is quite similar to the pain you feel after several days of coding. By simply supporting your forearms and wrists with something other than your muscles, you do away with all of the strain, and in my case this was all that was needed.

  45. *cough*advertisement*cough* by Derg · · Score: 1

    Nuff Said...

    --
    I'm a little tea pot.
  46. Some other thoughts by AutumnLeaf · · Score: 1

    The best thing I ever did was change my office at work to a "Standing Office." My desk height is 42 inches. I can stand and work, or sit in an elevated-chair and work. I find that I stand in the morning, and sit in the afternoon usually. I've also found that also sorts of back issues have greatly diminished because of this.

    As for the upper-extremity RSI problems, I found this book to be very educational (Check out the readers comments). The main message is: "It took many years for you to do this damage to your body - there are no overnight cures, and the problem is not the symptoms."

    The title of the book referenced by the link is: "It's not Carpal Tunnel Syndrome! RSI Theory & Therapy for Computer Professionals."

  47. Compounding the problem with other activities by lux55 · · Score: 1

    I wonder if these gloves would help my in playing guitar too. It says they're specifically made for keyboards, but going from one to the other throughout the day (I work at home, so I play guitar more often now), really strains my wrists fast. I'm careful about wrist positions on the keyboard and the guitar neck, but that doesn't help much. Neither does stretching and exercise.

    I'd be interested in something that was supportive in a range of activities (keyboarding, guitar, piano, jerking over pr0n -- I mean... ah shit ;)).

  48. dvorak with wine and ease of switching by Erpo · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The problem comes into play when playing some games - most Quake derivatives (Half-Life, Medal of Honor: Allied Assault, etc.) use hard-coded Querty key layouts, so your keys revert back to Querty. Just something to keep in mind.

    This is why I switched to linux/wine for quake and quake derivatives (mostly Half-Life for me). Well, that and that I like to be able to individually tweak per-game opengl settings like FSAA in startup scripts. Anyway, keypresses in X are always translated before they get to the program, so I don't have to worry about using qwerty on my own machine.

    It's not all that hard to switch back and forth, but there's a huge amount of inconsistency in windows. Most 3D games come with their keybindings preset for the popular WADS layout (w for forward, a for strafe left, d for strafe right, s for back, e for use, r for reload, etc...). Nicer, more modern games like Hitman II (the demo at least) automatically set themselves for your keyboard layout. I was incredibly pleased when I installed the game, got ready to reconfigure the key bindings, entered the menu, and found that the game had replaced WADS with ,AEO automatically. Some games like Jedi Knight go the opposite route, and read QWERTY in the menu and during gameplay. Not as good, but at least I can press a key during configuration and have the same key perform that function during gameplay.

    Wine fixes all of those problems, but what I really appreciate is what it does for Half-Life. In windows 2000 with the keyboard mapping set for dvorak, Half-Life reads dvorak in the menus and qwerty during gameplay. ARG! That means than I have to configure the game by entering a qwerty layout using a dvorak keyboard, and then play as if my keyboard weren't remapped. I tried HL under wine, saw that games worked like they should, and never went back.

    ----------

    As for the parent post's question about how easy it is to switch, I didn't get really comfortable with dvorak until I had been using it for about two months. Now that I'm comfortable with it, I find that I type significantly faster than I did with qwerty; I'm probably about 10-20% faster, but I've never done a benchmark or anything (before or after). The most significant benefit, I think, is that I got to re-learn how to type and get rid of some bad habbits I could never shake. Before I switched, I would hit shift with the same hand I used to type the capital letter; now I hit shift with one hand and hit the letter key with the other.

    As for how hard it is to switch back and forth between qwerty and dvorak, I have some direct experience with that. I use dvorak on my home computer and on a friend's computer (he switched about the same time I did), but I'm forced to use qwerty on the computers at my college. I spend much more time typing at home than I do at school, so using qwerty is fairly awkward for the first few minutes. After that I probably type at about 80-90% the speed I did before (again, that's just a guess).

    1. Re:dvorak with wine and ease of switching by wompser · · Score: 2

      "The most significant benefit, I think, is that I got to re-learn how to type and get rid of some bad habbits I could never shake"

      but it is a shame it could not improve your spelling....

      :-)

      --
      .....
  49. I've got knee braces by Syncdata · · Score: 1

    I've had trouble with my knees since I came into my own, and honestly, compressing the joints via some foam rubber type vice does not help with anything. Short term? Perhaps (maybe). But longterm? Think about it. What good does further compressing joints being frequently used do? None at all.

    --
    "Inattention makes clowns of us all" -Bean
  50. advertisment by mojowantshappy · · Score: 1

    Well, this thing got the ultimate advertisement, a posting on slashdot. Hell, it looks good enough, I might give it a shot.

    --

    This page was generated by a Barrel of Circus Midgets, and that is the way I like it!!!

  51. The cure for RSI by commodoresloat · · Score: 2

    Well, not really a cure, but this works for me pretty consistently. I do yoga, try to do it regularly, things are always better all over my body if I am doing it regularly. For keyboard/mouse pains a particular pose is the trick. You bend over from the waist. Like this. Now put your hands under your bare feet, with the toes at your wrists. Let your feet press your body weight into your carpal tunnel. You can pull up a bit, straightening your back like you're going to stand, creating more pressure massaging the carpal tunnel. Do this every day for a minute or so for best results. Another good one is to get on hands and knees, and instead of having your palms on the floor, bend your wrists so the back of your hands are on the floor. It's awkward but it's another good way to massage that part of your wrists and hands. It's a good counterpose for the pressure you put on that part of your body during keyboard work. And doing this regularly may be a pain, but I am sure it beats the shit out of wrist surgery.

  52. Re:Watch out for medical advice... like THIS advic by stype · · Score: 2

    I'll put in a good word for kinesis too. I love mine and it made my wrists feel better (not perfect....typing is still bad for you, no matter how you do it). When I'm forced to use a flat keyboard, I feel it after even just a few minutes.

    --
    -Stype
    Bus error -- driver executed.
  53. Post Office & Hardware Dvorak/custom keys by jago25_98 · · Score: 1

    1) I have a friend who works for a POSTAL SORTING OFFICE.

    I might consider buying him a pair for Chrismas but he doesn't touch type, more of a 2/3 finger affair. What's the likelyhood he'll never wear them?

    2) Dvorak: Could I just move the keys on an older keyboard and carry that around? I've found somewhere selling ps/2 keyboards for £1 anyway.
    If not, what about custom keys?

    -thanks

  54. On the topic of RSI... by stype · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Since this has just turned into an RSI discussion, I thought I'd add another overlooked point. In my own personal experience, I feel more pain from using a mouse than a flat keyboard. Resting your wrist on the mousepad with your hand bent up and forward, over the mouse, is very bad. I think its the act of having your wrist bent awkwardly while using your fingers that leads to RSI. Gel mouse and keyboard rests shouldn't be used *while* typing/using the mouse, only to rest when you *aren't* doing that. I switched to a trackball from a mouse and I always try to keep my wrist straight (not bent) when using it, and its made a big difference (in addition to my kinesis keyboard). Figure I'd mention this, as the mouse often gets overlooked.

    --
    -Stype
    Bus error -- driver executed.
    1. Re:On the topic of RSI... by Brummund · · Score: 1

      Another point is to set the mouse acceleration speed and resolution to the max. I only use the thumb to move the mouse pointer from left to right side of the screen. People who use old mice with dirty balls should really consider buying an optical one, and adjust the speed of the mouse pointer. It worked for me.

    2. Re:On the topic of RSI... by MikeBabcock · · Score: 2

      I have an old cordless keyboard (airboard-styled) with a trackball and buttons built into the right and left front corners (respectively) of the keyboard. I can easily hold it on my lap and move my hands to the sides of the keyboard, holding it much like a Gameboy Advance (TM) without strain to operate the 'mouse'.

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
  55. Re:Couple this with Dvorak... AND A VISUAL EDITOR! by MattRog · · Score: 1

    SSH-ing into my linux boxen provides no problems since it maps correctly.

    Go to google and type in 'Dvorak'. The first link is here:
    http://www.mwbrooks.com/dvorak/

    There's a "Training" link which points to here:
    http://www.mwbrooks.com/dvorak/training.htm l

    And then finally it points to a great training tool (I used it as well) here:
    http://www.karelia.com/abcd/abcd.html

    Was that so hard?

    --

    Thanks,
    --
    Matt
  56. Second picture by itwerx · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If you look at the picture on the second page where he's sitting in front of his laptop you can see why he's got RSI!
    Guy obviously didn't read the little ergonomics flyer that comes with practically everything these days.

    1. Re:Second picture by Paul+Menage · · Score: 2, Interesting
      If you look at the picture on the second page where he's sitting in front of his laptop you can see why he's got RSI!

      Guy obviously didn't read the little ergonomics flyer that comes with practically everything these days.


      Absolutely - he needs to get a separate keyboard and a good keyboard/mouse tray. Bringing my hands down several inches so that my forearms were level was IMO probably the single biggest factor in getting rid of my tendonitis a year or so ago.
    2. Re:Second picture by StoneTable · · Score: 2, Informative

      That picture was taken solely for showing the glove in action. 80% of the time I use my laptop I have a seperate keyboard and mouse.

  57. Touch-typing by eGabriel · · Score: 1

    I think it is this asdf-jkl; business they teach in school that is responsible for much of this strain.

    I taught myself to type at a young age, and over time have achieved very good speed. I experience pain from time to time, but the best thing I have done for it is use a happy hacking keyboard and trackball; it brings the mousing device closer to my right hand.

    Using so-called ergonomic keyboards hurts my hands more, as do attempts to type in the traditional "home-row" manner. Typing in my usual free form way doesn't require my hands to be in any particular position and I think this is what keeps me from having worse problems than I do.

  58. That can't really help... by soccerisgod · · Score: 1

    ..it doesn't prevent you from placing your hands on the kb in an all unnatural angle...

    The only solution is a good keyboard - like the Siemens KB PC-E (E as in ergonomic). It's a bit like the MS natural keyboard, only it's a) not from MS (which is a big plus) and b) it's more "configurable".. you can adjust it to your likings more. Looks a little strange, granted, but ever since I bought it, the pain in my hands is gone.

    Well I also had to buy a new mouse. I took this one that looks like a joystick. It makes me an object of pitty and laughter, but that's worth it. It's called an Anir Mouse and once you used it for a few months you can actually work as fast as before - without the pain!

    --
    If a train station is a place where a train stops, what's a workstation?
  59. Similar experience by leoboiko · · Score: 2, Informative

    I don't lift weights, but I'm a martial artist. When you train with weapons (nunchaku, jo and sword in my case), your wrists need to get stronger. After some weeks of nunchaku training my wrist pain stopped.

    So, if you don't like to lift weights, try training some traditional martial arts.

    --
    Prescriptive grammar:linguistics :: alchemy:chemistry. Stop being a nazi and learn some science.
  60. The Sexy Losers strip came true... by Nameles · · Score: 2
  61. ...carpal tunnel syndrome aside by mihets · · Score: 1

    ..what kind of gear would one need to protect onself from so called Nintendo thumb? no thimbles, please...

  62. Kinesis keyboards by Walles · · Score: 2
    I am using one as well and can really recommend it.

    One word of warning: It took me something like a month before I was able to type on one of these keyboards as fast as I did on an ordinary one. So if you buy one of these, have patience.

    Now that I'm there however, there is no looking back. I can warmly recommend these keyboards.

    --
    Installed the Bubblemon yet?
  63. How's that pronounced? by AyeRoxor! · · Score: 1

    "the IMAK Smart Gloves."

    Please tell me that's pronounced "EE-mock," or anything other than "EYE-mack." I don't want to wear the entrails of a computer so 'cute' that my sister wanted one even though she doesn't know anything else about them. :-P

  64. Changing my mouse really helped by Bazzargh · · Score: 2

    I changed over to a microsoft optical trackball from a standard mouse; I now very rarely get the pains in my elbow, upper arm and shoulder that came from using a mouse.

    However, I now get my ass whipped in the office UT competitions :(

  65. Dvorak doesn't cut it by jmichaelg · · Score: 3, Informative
    I developed a burning pain in my wrists because I wasn't holding my wrists perfectly flat while I typed and I was typing quite a bit more than coding normally requires. I had heard Dvorak made a difference and the pain was a sufficient enough prod that I took the plunge and switched. Didn't help. At first it did, but that was because I was barely typing.

    Once my speed had picked up to the point where I could actually get something done, my old habit of letting my wrist bend came back to haunt me. If the gloves look nerdy, imagine a man with sharp pencils strapped to the top of his arms with velcro for an even nerdier image. The pencil points would poke me every time my wrists bent which would remind me to straighten my wrists. That was what this geek needed to get rid of the problem. I've since discarded the pencils and instead, stacked two keyboard wrist rests on top of each other so I don't have to think about wrist posture - it comes automatically. YMMV.

    For what it's worth, I never did regain my qwerty speed. I type at 70 wpm now but back in the days when cpu speed was measured in khz I'd hit bursts of 95 wpm. The other down side is it annoys the hell out of people I work with because nobody ever knows what the current state of the keyboard is until they start typing and discover they're typing gibberish.

  66. Dealing with Carpal Tunnel by IceFox · · Score: 2
    I do not think that you can ever help your hands by doing just one thing. A few weeks ago I sat down and wrote out a number of actions that all in conjunction create an enviorment that is much better for your wrist I believe. Check it out here and let me know what you think.

    -Benjamin Meyer

    --
    Do you changes clothes while making the "chee-chee-cha-cha-choh" transformation sound?
    1. Re:Dealing with Carpal Tunnel by IceFox · · Score: 2

      Hmmm, the url didn't come out.... http://www.csh.rit.edu/~benjamin/articles/wrists.p hp

      --
      Do you changes clothes while making the "chee-chee-cha-cha-choh" transformation sound?
  67. Dvorak layout by Luveno · · Score: 1

    I had a problem were my hands and lower wrists would get painful after typing a while. On the suggestion of a friend, I switched to the Dvorak keyboard layout. After two (difficult) months, I regained my old typing speed, and now I type faster than I ever did on a qwerty board. And my hands don't really bother me anymore. Any time I type qwerty now (which is real slow for me), it feels like my fingers are getting stretched or something.

    I like Dvorak. YMMV.

  68. Re:this might seem off-the-wall... MOD PARENT UP by Chalex · · Score: 1

    People in the US these days really are not educated about nutrition, or rather whatever they're taught is obliterated by the constant marketing blitz of the latest Doritos...

    One has to hope that Slashdot readers are more educated than the average Joe, and know that carbohydrates are bad for you. If you DIDN'T know that, please spend an hour (that's how long it took me) to read the link
    on the subject of insulin

    I found it to be a great summary of all the bits and pieces of wisdom that i've picked up from my nutrition-conscious friends and family.

  69. Another solution by Contrarygirl · · Score: 1

    for tendonitis that works well for me, besides splinting, physical therapy etc (which I've done), is using the mouse with my non-dominant hand. That and keeping my wrists level, not cocked up or down, has made all the difference in the world. I won't ever regain the strength I had (let it go too long, according to my physical therapist) but the pain is mostly gone.

  70. Kinesis keyboard by IronyChef · · Score: 1
    For a less exotic (and less expensive) solution, try a Kinesis keyboard.

    I had severe tendinitis for years, treated with wrist braces, ice, and ibuprofen, but then a couple years ago a friend encouraged me to get one of these keyboards. Problem solved -- brilliant.

    1. Re:Kinesis keyboard by rudedog · · Score: 2

      I would say that the kinesis is more exotic and more expensive. The brace is $20. A kinesis can run up to $400, depending on which model you want. The professional with foot pad is 375 or so. That being said, I definitely like my Kinesis.

    2. Re:Kinesis keyboard by IronyChef · · Score: 1

      I have the basic Kinesis, which cost only $100. (As I mentioned, braces didn't work for me.)

  71. Relearning by gidds · · Score: 2, Interesting
    The most significant benefit, I think, is that I got to re-learn how to type and get rid of some bad habits I could never shake.

    This is certainly a significant factor; maybe the significant factor in the increased comfort of Dvorak.

    I started learning Dvorak, and got quite far, but the number of QWERTY keyboards I found myself using made me rethink. But like you, when I tried Dvorak I also stepped back and thought about how I type, and was able to use all of that when I went back to QWERTY, so that my typing is much more comfortable than it was.

    For example, I'd toyed with touch-typing before, but at that point I learned it properly. I also looked at my hand positions; the touch-type positions I'd seen for the left hand felt quite unnatural, so I changed (using middle finger for RDX instead of EDC, for example), and like you ensured I used the right Shift key.

    Later on, I had a small right palm strain, and found myself looking again at how I used my hands. (Stop sniggering at the back!) I found that my left hand was pretty much stationary, but my right was forever leaping between alphabetical keys, cursor keys, numeric keypad and mouse. As a result, I learned to mouse left-handed (I said stop sniggering!), which gives a much better balance of hand use for me. (Actually, I found left-handed mousing very easy to learn.)

    The important thing is to think: look at what your hands are actually having to do, and think about how to improve things. This should help most folk who have problems, especially if you do it before they get too bad.

    --

    Ceterum censeo subscriptionem esse delendam.

  72. REnassance mouse. by Unknown+Poltroon · · Score: 2

    http://www.keyalt.com/pointdevices/renaissance.htm
    Get one of these, if you mouseing wrist bothers you. I havent had a single twinge since i started using it 2 years ago, and neither have my friends who started using it. I would never use a normal mouse again, if i could.

    --
    All Troll + "offtopic" mods are meta moderated as "Unfair", because you abused the system.
  73. obKinesis by pez · · Score: 1

    Well, I can't let a /. post about input devices go by without talking about my beloved Kinesis keyboard. If you have heard about it and are on the fence about trying one out -- don't hesitate!

    From my journal:

    The Kinesis keyboard has done nothing less than save my career. While starting a company in 1995 the long work days took a toll on my hands. After seeing doctor after doctor and specialist after specialist the best advice they could offer was "type less." Thank you very much, but I had deadlines to meet.

    Everything changed when I splurged $300 for the Kinesis Contour keyboard. There are four major differences between this keyboard and the others out there, and together they make typing feel to me like I'm running down hill.

    1. Separated "key wells" (you have to see the picture to understand) which allow a much more natural hand position.

    2. Keys are lined up directly above each other (i.e. the T key is directly north of the G key, not up-to-the-left). This makes your fingers extend out and back, not out and back and side to side.

    3. The key wells are curved, which brings the keys on the upper and lower parts of the keybard closer to your fingertips. This is probably the single largest factor contributing to the "running down hill" feeling.

    4. Thumbs. Your thumbs are the two strongest digits on your hands. I don't know about you, but the way I used to type I would only use one of my thumbs, and only for one key (the space bar). My left thumb sat dormant. What a waste! Additionally, two of my most actively used fingers were my pinkeys due to the RET, Backspace and Control keys. Guess which fingers are your weakest? On the Kinesis, the thumbs get the most commonly used keys. I've got a couple of buttons re-mapped (due mostly to Emacs usage patterns) so the four major thumb buttons are Control, Alt, Return and Space. I couldn't live any other way.

    Give it a try. You won't regret it.

    Kinesis home page

    -Pez

  74. Kleenex and K-Y Jelly by sharkey · · Score: 2

    A keyboard lovers' best friends.

    --

    --
    "Outlook not so good." That magic 8-ball knows everything! I'll ask about Exchange Server next.
  75. Not really. by Chris+Burke · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Switching to dvorak is an improvement over qwerty, but it's a very minor improvement compared to using correct typing posture. You'll get RSI typing in dvorak just the same as qwerty if you have your wrists bent while typing, though it might take longer. I type dvorak and have for a good four years, but I still see a pair of these gloves in my future.

    --

    The enemies of Democracy are
    1. Re:Not really. by golrien · · Score: 1

      It's been proved that in an average day, an average QWERTY typist's fingers move an average of around 20 miles. On an average Dvorak the same average typist's fingers would travel around 1 mile. Sounds to me like a great way to prevent RSI.

    2. Re:Not really. by Chris+Burke · · Score: 2

      Sure, but the point is that you should be able to have your fingers move 20 miles, if you have correct hand posture. With correct hand posture, the difference in movements between the keyboard layouts doesn't make as much difference in your RSI. It's lots of repetitive movements -while your tendons are scrapping across your bone- that is the big problem.

      But I didn't mean to imply that using Dvorak wasn't a good thing in and of itself. :)

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
  76. Use 'em, love 'em, never type without 'em by Del+Vach · · Score: 3, Informative

    At my previous job, my (right) mousing arm was in a very bad position for mousing, and I started getting a significant amount of pain in my wrist. (Would have been less than $100 for a proper mouse tray so I can use a computer for the remainder of my life, cheap bastards)

    When I switched jobs, I started using the Imak SmartGlove and my wrist DOES NOT HURT AT ALL ANYMORE. If I type/mouse without one for a few hours, I feel the pain coming back.

    The only drawback is wear. If this thing in on my wrist basically all day, it gets dirty. After a few weeks or months (depending on your particular body chemistry), it will start to get a bit rank, and will need to be washed. Just take out the support and throw it in with the laundry.

    But drying can shrink them, and the support does weaken over time (although I must say, in the last two years they've made a few design improvements that have worked towards fixing this). So every few months when it's getting worn out, I get a new one at Staples for $15 (large tends to sell out first), and I use the 'old' one at home.

    My 2 cents: If you have experienced wrist pain, or want to avoid it, invest in at least one of these. They're well-constructed, a great value, and much less expensive and painful than carpel tunnel surgery.

    Buying a few SmartGloves a year? About $30-60. Not having burning wrist pain and weak hands? PRICELESS.

  77. Chord-lite by dbm1175 · · Score: 1

    It really seems that the standard keyboard is an antiquated input device. Hopefully it will be replaced in the near future. Along those lines, there was a thread here on Slashdot a few months ago about the chordlite one-handed keyboard. Has anyone tried to build one of these? Are there any other 'fit to your hand' type of keyboards out there? I'd love to build and try one... But Radio Shack scares me.

  78. Brace gives better results than a glove. by darkxman · · Score: 1

    I tried one of those types of gloves before but I found they just didn't protect enough of my wrist or give me enough support. I switched to this brace and felt a whole lot better. Plus I sorta look like Batman now. Bonus!! http://www.carpalproducts.com/3ringtext.htm

  79. Re:Watch out for medical advice... like THIS advic by figa · · Score: 1
    Here's a summary of my crits on the Ars forum:

    1. Ars should have put a medical warning up front. They give all sorts of disclaimers when they discuss overclocking and hardware modifications. Splinting is a physical modification and should be taken as seriously.

    2. The review treated the splints like a new MS mouse, video card, or other general use computing accessory, which they are not. The reviewer didn't offer much context for his medical condition, and his method of testing them (12 hours+ for over 3 weeks?) could be damaging. They're medical devices and don't need burn-in.

    3. Their treatment/resource section at the end was heavily biased toward surgery. There was very little on the proper techniques to prevent RSI. Ars has done incredibly detailed and informative reviews of new technology (OSX, CPUs) and this was really weak, given the serious nature of the topic.

    4. They lump hand conditions together as "Carpal Tunnel", which is outdated and misleading. There are a number of hand injuries that can be caused by overcomputing. Carpal Tunnel Syndrome is only one of them.

    5. The Ars forum has a couple bad suggestions, which could cause additional damage to an injured person. Ars should have consulted a medical expert to dispel some myths up front.

    To clarify, my 15 point "treatment plan" isn't really treatment, and I hope nobody takes it as medical advice. I'm not a doctor, and the points I listed are preventative measures that I've informally discovered through my own research and discussion with my doctor.

    Check out the Ars forum and give them the hits they deserve for at least addressing the subject. I'd like to see them do a an in-depth follow-up with their usual thoroughness.

  80. This Dvorak claim is real by tamills · · Score: 1
    I don't think slowing down is the healing process. I had great pain in my palms, hand-heel, wrists, and forearms after working as a data-entry clerk in college in 1986. I lived with it till 1993 (often in tremendous pain). Then I switched to Dvorak. The pain went away. Period. I switched over a period of two weeks and I did it by typing _more_ not less. I typed the alphabet on Dvorak _literally_ hundreds of times till I could touch-type.

    Nine years, constant keyboarding, and still no pain. I go through coding binges and still have no pain.

    I highly recommend trying Dvorak. BTW, I am bi-keyboardal. I can still type QWERTY.

    Regarding speed. Yes my fingers really can move faster. Not my brain, but my fingers. I suspect it's the brain that is the limiting factor. I keep having to stop.... and think. If I know exactly what I'm going to type, BRRRRRRRPPP, it's done.

    But forget the speed. It's worth switching just to be rid of the pain.

    --

    Be careful what you wish for...

    Where your treasure is there is your heart also...

  81. split split keyboard by Flamesplash · · Score: 2

    I think it depends on the split keyboard. I currently have a MS ergo keyboard, which is split but not adjustable. I type above the keyboard so my wrists don't have to bend up, but if you were typing at a bad level I could see how you would have to bend them.

    I currently have on order a split keyboard that allows you to adjust the angle of split as well as the y tilt. Something else I like about it is that it doesn't have a number pad and integrates the insert/home/... and arrows keys into the main key section so the width profile isn't much more than the main section. This is nice for me because most keyboard trays aren't made so that the main key section is centered in front of the user, it's off to the left.

    --
    "Not knowing when the dawn will come, I open every door." - Emily Dickinson
  82. S, M, L, XL keyboards please. by giaguara · · Score: 1

    We don't have everybody the same sized hands.

    I have tried the "ergonomic" keybarods and those were a pain for me (20+ y, and rheumatic tendence, if it changes anything). the keys are too far for me.

    On the other hand, my bf can hardly manage to type on my laptops. the keys are too close to each other for him.

    i am 16 - 20 hours a day at my computer, and have no pain. or, no pain since i use just the ibook keyboard. but i know that for many people it's not probably so comfortable; if you have big hands or fat fingers, you may want a bit bigger keyboard.

    i saw a month ago a really small keyboard, and was thikning that it would do for me.

    but where are the different sized keyboards? s, m and l.

    if you move your fingers and hands how they move naturally, thus have a right sized keyboard, that'd resolve something.

  83. Re:Watch out for medical advice... like THIS advic by Ian+Bicking · · Score: 2
    Ditto on the Kinesis keyboard -- I have one that has helped me tremendously. After using the Kinesis for a few years I no longer feel pain from flat keyboards (like I did before I used it), but I can still feel the difference after long periods. And after the short learning period, my typing accuracy improved considerably using the Kinesis without any loss of speed. I recently started using a trackball, which also seems to help -- especially with my thumb doing the clicking (which it can do forever without tiring, unlike my fingers), while at the same time I've set up my environment so that I use the mouse less anyway (using , a very neat window manager).

    I also made the choice not to treat myself in many other ways. I occassionally take ibuprophen before I go to sleep, which reduces swelling and I believe that helps me heal. I never take it during the day, or ice, or use any other sort of physical intervention. I have feared that will just address my symptoms, while the underlying problem becomes even greater since I no longer get the painful feedback... when it finally catches up with me it might be worse than ever. My difficulties were only uncomfort and a limiting of my time on the computer -- I know other people have had much more serious conditions, and whatever happens I never want to get there.

  84. AW Dammit! I should have adv. for MY Company! by Havokmon · · Score: 2
    Here's a whole selection of supports

    Personally, I use the Heavy-Duty Single Wrap (WHD-1) when I sleep, and nothing during the day.

    I don't type constantly, so the Dr. says after 15 years, I only have mild carpel tunnel, and I should just keep my wrists from bending when I sleep. Apparently, it's common for people to sleep curled up, and if you are starting with carpel tunnel, that just damages your wrists more.

    Besides, who the hell is "IMAK"? You buy Valeo, you can say "Hey, Mr. Olympia wears this stuff." (Check out any Muscle and Fitness mag)

    This ends my advertisement. :P

    --
    "I can't give you a brain, so I'll give you a diploma" - The Great Oz (blatently stolen sig)
  85. My experience, my solutions by ringrose · · Score: 1

    Caveat: I am not a doctor.

    I have RSI. As a graduate student working on my Master's thesis, the pain was so bad I would go home after typing half a day. I was scared and a little depressed. Many of my friends at MIT had similar problems.

    What I found is that there is no generic solution which works for everyone. I have a collection of things people have found useful.

    0. Listen to your hands. When it hurts, stop. I made a habit of paying attention to feelings from my hands, and there's a funny feeling I get right before they start hurting. If you've got RSI, you have probably trained yourself to ignore this warning.

    1. Keyboards. I use a dathand and love it. It is expensive, but almost immediately I could type all day. Other people I know prefer Kinesis (I still don't understand where they put their thumbs while typing...) or the Microsoft Natural, both of which are substantially lower cost.

    2. Gently stretch your hands and wrists before typing. You're about to use them for hours; if it were for a sport you would stretch first.

    3. HandEze gloves are very much like the ones described in this article, without the padding. They don't seem like they should work, but they helped me a lot. I used them for months until I no longer needed them. They're really cheap, it is worth the money to see if they help. If the seams bother you, turn them inside out, and if you don't like the color you can always dump them into some dye.

    4. Posture. Occasionally I have a relapse. Most of the time I realize that it's because I've stopped sitting correctly.

    5. Exercise. Occasionally I spend a weekend running around in the woods with a bunch of friends, and I noticed that every time my hands stopped hurting. Now I bicycle to work when the weather permits. Bicycling and going to the gym do not work as well for me as running around in the woods, so there is something else there - I'll be examining another poster's comment about insulin, which I had not heard before.

    6. Ibuprofin. When my hands hurt at night (hasn't happened for a long time now) I take Ibuprofin before going to bed to reduce swelling and let the tendons heal. Don't do this when you're going to actually use your hands, it masks the warning signals that you are doing something bad.

    7. Tension. Because I'd been through so much pain at keyboards, when I sat down in front of a keyboard my hands immediately tensed up in anticipation of pain. This did not help. For me, the Datahand was a different enough keyboard to break that cycle.

    8. Arm rests. I took the arm rests off my chair. They were compressing my ulnar nerve (outside of the elbow) and causing numbness and pain in my pinky fingers.

    9. Breaks. Every half hour, take a five-minute break. One of the reasons I listen to CDs in the office (on headphones) is that when a CD ends it forms a good pausing point at which you can ask "did I take breaks during the last hour?".

    RSI takes years to develop. It is taking even more years to go away. But, for me, it is going away.

    My opinion on wrist splints: use them at night if you wake up with hand/arm discomfort. Do not use them during the day, because they can let your muscles atrophy.

    I have no relation to any of the companies which make the products I mention here, except as a user.

    --
    There's always one more bu6
  86. Another cure... by curunir · · Score: 3, Informative

    Rock Climbing (indoor or outdoor).

    I used to have a mild case of CTS. I could only go about an hour before typing would become too painful. My wrist position while typing is pretty much as bad as could possibly be imagined, so that probably had something to do with it.

    Then I started climbing. Climbing builds insane amounts of finger and wrist strength. I can now support my entire body weight (which has decreased by 30 lbs too!) hanging from any one of my fingers.

    And my CTS is gone. Entirely. I routinely go 8-10 hours of continual typing (yes, I am a programmer) without any pain whatsoever. And my wrist position is as bad as ever.

    --
    "Don't blame me, I voted for Kodos!"
  87. Personal experiences of RSI by Zog+The+Undeniable · · Score: 1
    I had RSI two years ago. I'm right-handed, and the problems started with the occasional ache in my upper right arm (the best description of this is "like toothache" - the pain comes from right inside the bone structure where the nerves run). Later I got pins and needles in some of the fingers and thumb of that hand, and the pain started to become distracting; enough to make me wince.

    I'd heard about RSI, so I muddled along using my left hand for the mouse instead. Over the course of a fortnight the pain went away. Then, a week before I was due to go on holiday, I did an hour or so of image editing and used my right hand again (because it's more accurate). A few days later the pain was excruciating - the only time it went away was if I was lying down on my back or holding my arm above my head. The strange posture this forced me into then gave me pulled muscles in my back and shoulder, which meant I was in more or less constant pain for the whole of my annual holiday.

    This was July; it took until September for the symptoms to subside, and I had to re-learn how to use a mouse *properly* with my left hand (I believe Guy Steele once called this this "ambimoustrous"). My doctor couldn't offer anything except a cortisone injection if the pain got too bad - one morning it almost made me throw up!

    The situation now is that I mouse with my left hand nearly all the time, but I can manage an hour of Quake with the right one without much problem. However, after the hour is up there is some tingling and an unusual warm sensation in my arm, which leads me to think the damage is permanent, and I'm only 33! If the left hand looks like going the same way I'll switch straight to a tracker ball, a graphics tablet or something - my employers were quite supportive and do take RSI cases seriously.

    Humans weren't designed to use mice or keyboards. I can see BIG problems in a decade's time, maybe an explosion in disability claims among office workers. You have been warned - don't ignore the warning signs.

    --
    When I am king, you will be first against the wall.
  88. speeling and grammer by Erpo · · Score: 2

    but it is a shame it could not improve your spelling....

    Actually, my spelling is usually fairly good. The problem is that learning dvorak just made it easier to stay up until 2am writing posts on slashdot while reading about the latest LoTR movie (you know, the one with hobbits in it? ;) ).

    That said, good for you. Slashdot and the internet in general are absolutely polluted with posters who don't understand basic English grammar such as the difference between there, their and they're. I'm not talking about those for whom English is a second language -- they're pretty easy to pick out, and the fact that they're making an effort (most of them do) is a positive thing. I'm talking about people who fell asleep in their ninth grade English class -- every day -- and now spend their time chatting on AOL using "u" instead of "you" and ignoring the difference between your and you're.

  89. Kinesis isn't radical enough by bandy · · Score: 1
    When my hands blew out, I was told by management that I had one shot at buying a keyboard to help me out ....

    I ended up buying a DataHand keyboard...er...key-thing. Minimal movement of all of my fingers in all directions, I didn't have to learn much of the new layout as it's 85% QWERTY and I can definitely type faster and more accurately than before. I was a very good touch-typist before everything went cattywampus, probably due to the very attractive typing teacher I had to look at when I learned.

    I ended up liking the one I had at work so much, I bought another for use at home. Flat keyboards are a pain.

    --
    "You might as well get your son a ticket to hell as give him a five string banjo." -unknown minister
  90. Not in my experience. by Inoshiro · · Score: 2

    I'm a Dvorak guy. I tend to remember "modes" for how I'm typing (such as, I always try and type "slashdot.org" in qwerty mode, because all my Dvorak machines have bookmarks for it).

    But that didn't affect the layout I used for games. What did affect the layout I used for games was that UT wouldn't accept ' , . as keys. Quake handled this fine by always not caring about the raw input, but no UT-based engine I have found yet has support for non-letter keys as input keys. Very frustrating.

    --
    --
    Internet Explorer (n): Another bug -- that is, a feature that can't be turned off -- in Windows.
  91. A suggestion for Ars Technica's next review by Ross+Finlayson · · Score: 1

    Which is easier on the eyes: White text on a black background, or black text on a white background? :-)

  92. Re:moderators by Ninjacam · · Score: 1

    There are many people who can moderate the posts. If you read the faq, you will see how many possibilities there are as to who moderates what posts.

    The faq is located at http://slashdot.org/faq/ in case you need the link.

    --
    -- Some people live life in the fast lane. I live life in oncoming traffic.
  93. Obligatory SL reference by Skiboo · · Score: 2
  94. Re:This worked for me, and I am everyone. by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

    I would say that 99% of the cases are psychosomatic. What a coincidence, the same as the percentage of statistics that are made up. You may imagine things, but that doesn't mean that other people don't experience them for real.

    --
    Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
  95. Last Post! by alpg · · Score: 1

    aIIIIIIIIIII!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!11
    MY LIGHT JUST DIED
    I AM SO SAD
    I'm blind! I'm blind!
    Light?
    Turn all your xterms to black-on-white :) Plenty of light that way.
    -- Seen on #Debian

    - this post brought to you by the Automated Last Post Generator...