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Keyboards for One Hand?

visibleman asks: "Having recently damaged my right hand to the point where it is unusable for a month and only for light tasks after that I was wondering whether anyone in the community knows of any devices which replace the keyboard but require the use of only one hand. I remember a long time ago seeing in magazines something that had a single button per finger and relied on the user learning key combinations to make up letters but I have not seen this for ages, does anyone know what I am talking about?" Ask Slashdot covered this topic, twice: in this article from 1999 and a followup from 2001. For those readers who find themselves in this same situation, what solutions have you found and what were your experiences, good or bad? Are there any new devices in this vein that deserve mention or are the older solutions still the best?

14 of 44 comments (clear)

  1. Just type slower by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    Or jerk off less. Sheesh.

  2. I had something like this happen... by revmoo · · Score: 2, Funny

    I broke my left arm(Again) a couple years back, and I had to wait a couple months until I could get the cast off.

    Being able to use a computer is the LEAST of your worries. I was able to adapt to typing with my right hand about 60% of my previous typing speed in a couple days, it took some doing, but it wasn't that big of a deal. A couple weeks later, I had enough strength in my fingers to use the "WASD" keys on my left hand, so I was able to play First person shooters again with little trouble.

    You only have a month? Just wait it out, it isn't the end of the world.....Why not ask "How do I shower with one hand"....though I guess maybe that hadn't come to mind :)

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    I would expect such blatant racism on Fark, but on Slashdot? Mods please ban this asshole.
  3. Wow! by sigwinch · · Score: 2, Funny
    I am successfully resisting the temptation to post a one-handed-typing joke.

    I guess those impulse control classes worked.

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    Kuro5hin.org: where the good times never end. ;-)

  4. One-handed keyboard typing by Sabbath.sCm · · Score: 4, Informative

    About One Hand Typing I found it interesting even for those who can use both hands (it would be useful for typing and using the mouse at the same time).

  5. google by illuvata · · Score: 4, Informative

    lets ask google, shall we?

    first, we get this site, about typing on a normal keyboard with one hand.

    then this one, which shows a few one hand keyboards

    also theres this kind of academic looking paper about half-QWERTY.

  6. HalfKey by FrenZon · · Score: 2, Informative

    I had written a small program that would let you use a regular QWERTY keyboard efficiently (it uses your existing QWERTY skills) with one hand, but as it was based entirely on someone else's work, when they asked me to, I took it down.

    So instead, try the HalfKeyboard on which my work was based. Failing that, I hear good things about the one-handed DVORAK layouts.

  7. SOMEONE has to say it by xagon7 · · Score: 3, Funny

    "Having recently damaged my right hand to the point where it is unusable for a month"

    this would be HELL on your sex life if it wern't for this saving grace:

    "and only for light tasks"

  8. Twiddler by breaston · · Score: 2, Informative

    I think several of the 'wearable computer' labs were using this. Twiddler

  9. one-handed dvorak by oskillator · · Score: 3, Informative
    August Dvorak created a pair of single-handed variants of his Dvorak layout, one optimized for the left hand only, one for the right hand only.

    These have the advantage that you don't need to buy new hardware to try them out.

  10. Slashdot readers should be aware... by ChrisSontagsAnus · · Score: 3, Funny
    That SCO owns contract rights to all major single-hand typing technologies. The relevance of this technology to our operations should be clear when you consider our sexual frustration level and our community standards for decency.

    Our single-hand typing technologies may be licensed at a reasonable rate for Sun and Microsoft users.

  11. Check out Infogrip... by www.whitehouse.org · · Score: 3, Informative

    You should look into the BAT Personal keyboard. They have different models for right and left hands. Fairly easy to use, I was able to type about 40WPM in less than a week on a MEDUSA workstation. I still prefer my Model M at home...

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    Mod me down and I shall become more trollish than you can possibly imagine!
  12. Keyboards for One Hand? by Anonvmous+Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    I had one but I sold it after moving in with my girlfriend.

  13. a software partial solution by n9hmg · · Score: 4, Informative

    Dasher lets you soft of "steer a course" through what you want to say, which is pretty handy when you need to create a long stream of text. In the current incarnation, it seems to be lc alphas and the space, only, but to blow out the bulk of your text, and insert punctuation and formatting later, it could be very handy. With use, it learns the statistical distribution of letter order, so that the easiest things to write are things you write a lot... when you pass through a "J", vowels are big and easy to hit, while consonants are tiny little slits. You'll see what I mean when you play with it. I don't use it myself, aside from seeing what it can do so I can help others use it if needed, but it's definitely what I would use if I needed to write a book and had only limited use of my hands.

  14. One-handed Dvorak by zsazsa · · Score: 3, Informative

    No need for a new keyboard - a remap is all you need. The single-handed Dvorak layouts are built into Windows, Linux, and probably OSX. Even though I have the use of both hands, I've considered learning left-handed Dvorak so I don't have to lift my right hand from the mouse.

    From this website about one-handed keyboarding: In 1945, during World War II, Colonel Robert Allen lost his right arm. Being a writer, he now found typing nearly impossible. He contacted August Dvorak and asked for help. Using his previous research, August developed keyboard layouts for one handed typists. These are known as the Dvorak left hand layout and the Dvorak right hand layout. A few months after using the Dvorak left hand layout, the Colonel was typing over 50 WPM.