Ask Slashdot: Do You Press "6" Key With Right Or Left Hand?
New submitter ne0phyte73 writes: In some countries and in some touch typing books key "6" is pressed with right hand and in some others with left. It's not a big issue until you have a split keyboard. Guys at UHK are putting it on the left side. Do you agree? What hand do you use to press "6"? Left hand here, but it's not a strong preference; I'll take a keyboard that omits Caps Lock wherever they put the 6.
I press the "3" key twice, really fast.
I use the numpad almost always.
I use the number pad a lot more often than the top row of number keys.
It depends on what key I'm hitting just before it and with which hand.
Perhaps the split-keyboard designers could solve the issue by putting a 6 key on both halves.
"Grab them by the pussy" -- President of the United States of America
So I use my right hand to press the "6" key (and any other number key, for that matter).
It falls on the left side of the keyboard. So use the numpad like a normal person.
Whichever finger is closest to the 6 key wins. It's the American way.
My Microsoft Natural 4000 keyboard has it on the left.
Since I've been using Microsoft ergonomic keyboards for years, I'm now in the habit of hitting the 6 with my left forefinger.
(Microsoft can't make a decent operating system, but their keyboards and mice are first class.)
If you're a zombie and you know it, bite your friend!
(Microsoft can't make a decent operating system, but their keyboards and mice are first class.)
I agree, but I think the reason for this is that the only thing they have do with "their" keyboards and mice is the MS logo on it.
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Sweden here and it seems like I press the 6 key with left hand. Looking at finger charts it looks like right is slightly more common
Microsoft's split KBs (e.g. 4000) have 6 on the left. Same for my fancy Goldtouch. Versions of these have been around since the 90's, all with the 6 on the left.
I took a typing class in 10th grade (the first opportunity I had back in the 80s). It was the most practically useful class I had in high school. The class was very clear in teaching that you use your right index finger for 6 and 7, while your left does 4 and 5. Going down the keyboard, the left index finger also does T, G, and B, while the right does Y, H, and N. The only one I do wrong is 6.
Now looking at my keyboard, 6 is almost centered between F and J, the home positions for the index fingers, but it's ever so slightly closer to F, so perhaps they were teaching the class wrong?
The six is closest to the right hand when resting on the home row. It's in line with the rest of the keys that the right hand press like y h and n. Why would you press it with the left?
I use base 6 for all my work.
Does anyone make a split keyboard with a 6 for both halves? That would seem to satisfy everyone at a cost of one extra key.
Of course, I use the num-pad with my right hand. Who would not?
Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
On my keyboard, the "B" key is much more ambiguous than the 6 (excluding the number pad, of-course).
I'm one of those guys that took a touch typing class with a bunch of girls back in high school. Do they even teach typing in school any more?
Anyhoo, the teacher (back in the 70's) was very specific about which hand/finger went with which finger.
Yes, I press the 6 key with either my right or left hand. It depends on whichever key I pressed last, and whichever index finger is therefore closest. Unless I'm using a keyboard with a number pad, then it's always the right hand...
I use my left hand to hold the left ALT key and then I use my right hand to push 5 and 4 on the numeric keypad.
If I am typing numbers exclusively, then it is the right, on the number pad. If I am typing letters interspersed with numbers then it depends where my hands are. I can touch type in a sense, meaning that I don't have to look at the keyboard while I am typing. However, my hands aren't fixed in one position, and which letter I hit with which hand is dependent on the runup of letters preceding and trailing it. My right hand occasionally ventures over and may type B, G, T or 6, while my left hand occasionally ventures over and hits N, H, Y or 7. It all depends on the circumstances.
I play piano, guitar and bass and I think my musical style follows through on the keyboard. I tend to look at words subconsciously and figure out the best pattern to type them, just as I look at a group of notes and dynamically determine what frets and strings would make a group of notes more fluid.
I would also liken it to playing pool. When you are a beginner, you just hope to get a ball in the pocket. When you get better, you are looking for how to set up the next shot.
If you are not allowed to question your government then the government has answered your question.
What do you mean? An African or European "6"?
Why don't split keyboards simply duplicate the border columns on both sides? This is the main reason i haven't bothered to buy one.
With finger size ratio being linked to in utero testosterone levels, answering to that one may tell unexpected things about respondent.
you insensitive clod!!
"I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
No, I don't.
I use the F5 key all the goddamn time, mostly refresh/rerun/recompile
F5 is generally the left-most Function key of the second block, separated by a space from the F4 key. I use the F5 way, way more than I do the 6 key (which is over on the numpad).
I got a wireless Microsoft Sculpt ergo keyboard and while I love it, it's taken me a while to get used to the fact that the F5 key is not in the middle, I have to look for the F6 key, then go one to the left. After six months or so I'm used to it, but old habits die hard, and that visual cue between the F4 and F5 keys being gone was hard to get used to. To be fair Microsoft has the corresponding Function key above each number key, although that's dumb because anyone buying this keyboard is a touch-typist.
moox. for a new generation.
On the MacBook keyboard the "6" is closer to the left index finger; using the right hand would be wrong here.
All the replies here mentioning the numpad are missing the point, as this is about touch-typing. If you take the time out to move your hand away from the home row you're not really touch-typing anymore, are you?
There is no sig.
French fr_FR Keyboard layout has numbers at upper SHIFT selection.
You are better using the numeric pad. Guess how it can be an annoyance with laptops.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
Léa Gris
i had one - it was arm-rest mounted. there was only one space bar. i touch-type, so it would be like "rattle rattle rattle THUMP arse!.... rattle rattle THUMP".
no the weirdest thing i found was that because the keyboard was mounted on the arm rests, it was *outside* of my peripheral vision. it took three weeks to get used to, and i realised that at the time i clearly wasn't genuinely a touch-typist... because i had been using my peripheral vision to locate the keys! within three weeks i was back up to speed and accuracy.
yeahhh i loved that keyboard. the look on people's faces when they would come into my cubicle and see me with my feet up on the desk, 15in monitor 6 feet away in linux "console" mode at 80x60 resolution, happily using vi for programming at over 170wpm....
then I look at the keyboard and hit it with my right index finger.
The '6' key is the one key I, as a touch typist, fark up well over half the time.
I learned touch typing in school, but didn't really get to the numbers. I use the number pad as much as I can, but when I use the top row I will use left hand for 5 and below and usually but not always the right hand for higher numbers. The problem is that I never got the positions totally fixed in my muscle memory, so when typing anywhere from 5 to about 8 there's a good chance I'll do a little run up the keyboard till I find it (6, backspace, 7, backspace, 8, got it!).
I like my coffee the way I like my women - roasted and ground up into little tiny pieces.
I press 6 with my left hand, but then I also usually press "Y" with my left hand as well.
There you go.
Bruce F. Webster (brucefwebster.com)
I use my penis — a.k.a. middle leg.
6676767676767667 Apparently I use my left hand, I keep getting 7 with my right.
Of course. For those of us who are, shall we say, gifted, we don't even have to get out of our chair to hit the "6" key.
However, the fact that we have to type sans trousers makes us sort of unemployable but that's a decent trade-off.
I can also play five octaves of the C note simultaneously on my piano in this manner.
You are welcome on my lawn.
I primarily use a MS split keyboard at work and use my left hand. On conventionally-laid-out keyboards, I use my right hand since that's how I was taught in school.
I have a split Microsoft Wireless Natural at home (yes, a huge offense as a Linux-only user) and the 6 is on the left.
And at work (also Linux-only of course) I have some type of split Logitech and 6 is also on the left.
I am thinking left is probably right (pun intended).
My way of keeping family members off my computer is to use a Microsoft Split keyboard and an Optical Trackball Explorer for my mouse.
Remap caps lock to escape. All your vi editing mode apps (which can be a lot with proper configuration -- your shell is in emacs mode by default (ewwww)) will be much faster after you get used to it.
2 American Marines taking out some wacko in Belgium (not France; it was on the Belgian side of the border) has absolutely nothing to do with tech news, "news for nerds". This is a tech news site. One with poor management, but still a tech news site.
I can say that I use my left hand to press the 6 key. Since that is how the MS keyboard is setup. From the original white keyboard to the 4000 that I use now (and have gone through a few of those... Damn those cats spilling my drink into them!), that's the way it has always worked for me. And I've never really thought about it.
It does remind me of the time time that I saw somebody with the white original ergonomic keyboard shoved in their backpack when I was flying somewhere. This was when I had already started killing my MS 4000 keyboards. I'm killing keyboards, even when something isn't spilling liquids into mine. A key stops working, usually something I actually use (Esc, F1, A...)
Bryan
Personally I think split keyboards are extremely uncomfortable. I don't know why people prefer them to the old style.
Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
I did do touch typing in high school, but I have regressed long ago to looking while I type, so I hit y,b,h,g,6,7,5 keys with both hands.
Oh, and I popped the caps lock key off. Cuts down on errors.
Yes, it's a tech news site (of sorts) but which finger you use on the '6' key has got to be ... well ... kind of low on the priority list for stories, wouldn't you think?
Heh. My way of keeping anyone off my computer is using i3 on NetBSD...
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Right hand. And I'm left-handed (if that matters).
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Seemingly silly question, but actually a nice one. I'm right-handed, and I guess it depends on which hand is closer, so no preference in particular. Looks like left hand is preferred, though.
Stupidity is an equal opportunity striker.
Fellow slashdotter Bill Dog
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It depends on the program. The programs I need to input a lot of numbers, my right hand is on the keypad. The programs that need a lot of mouse input, it's the left hand that hits all the numbers.
The 6 and 'b' key get hit by my left and right probably equally. I do some "stupid" stuff when typing and that's one of them. Whatever hand is free tends to whack those keys. On the other side of the coin space bar is ONLY ever hit by my right hand. I've tried changing that habit before and I can't seem to shake it. I know it slows me down a bit (I'm at 105wpm usually) but whatever. I can live with it. You can see the wear mark on any keyboard I've had for years and I think it's funny.
I tend not to use keyboard with number pads after being on laptops for years as a consultant. I just got used to the less than 101 key designs so my penchant for punching 6 with either hand is just as strong as it is with 'b'.
I suppose, but remember what I said about the management of this site. This one is probably a Slashvertisement of sorts.
Yeah, I had been using the right hand, but when I switched to MS split keyboards, they all have the 6 on the left side of the split, so I had to change. According to TFA, in the US, touch typing students are taught to use the right hand for 6; I learned to touch type in the US, so that must've been where I got it from.
... which I use my right elbow for.
I use my dick; it's really inefficient but it feels right.
The useless part of the keyboard is the number pad. I want that space so that my arm isn't hanging so far out to reach my pointing device. But I'm not willing to gain more space in that area at the expense of high-usage cursor-movement keys, that's completely unacceptable. So feel free to drop the 6 entirely.
Depends which key came before the 6. Sorry, I learned to play piano years before I saw a typewriter. ... but it's fast."
Thank goodness I never had to take keyboarding in school - the teachers would would walk by in programming and say, "my God
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Why not both?!
Elok
Because people who type all the time don't like to have their wrists twisted like they are wear handcuffs. I remember the first time I used a Hodgekiss keyboard (split and tilted up) my wrists were much, much happier in just a few minutes.
Different AC here. Basic non-ergo Keytronic layout. I use left hand, not right hand, and I was taught touch typing (and can still do 100wpm) by a teacher who taught by the book that says "right-handed."
Even though the "6" is, properly speaking, in the "6/y/h/n" vertical row that "belongs" to the right hand, I just looked closely at my fingers on the actual physical keyboard on which I've typed for 10+ years, and its clones on which I've typed for at least 20+, it's because the "6" is closer to the left index finger than the right index finger. The pad of my hand (not the wrist, about halfway up the pad beneath my pinky finger) rests on the lower edge of my keyboard, and my thumbs rest so comfortably on the spacebar that the spacebar has a little worn spot on it.
Home exercise: Place fingers on home row. Touch right and left index fingers to "T", "Y", and "R". For my fingers and keyboard, "Y" is the most comfortable, almost dead-center. Repeat experiment with "5/6/7". For my fingers/keyboard, I can't reach "5" with right. I can't reach "7" with left, and "6" is reachable with either, but more easily reached with left finger. with left on "T" and right on "y" almost centered beneath "6", left is visually confirmed closer to "6."
(Side note: Both by size of wear spot and by observation while typing this post, I almost exclusively press the space bar with my *right* thumb. Maybe that contributes to using my left idex to hit th 6 key -- my left thumb is basically unused. I just typed this entire sentence with my left thumb crammed under the keyboard and it felt comfortable. Undoable with right thumb in equivalent positon.)
P.S; Our touch-typing teachers taught us the same way, but for me and my keyboard, we cheat on the "6". I've forgotten whether it's supposed to matter which thumb you use on the space bar, although I imagine I could have squeezed out a couple of extra wpm if I'd used both thumbs in high school.
P.P.S.: Fuck the last 5 years of UX "professionals" who think everything has to change every six months for the hell of it, or the last 15 years who think that menu options should change depending on which options the software decides are more frequently used. Neither group knows anything of muscle memory because neither group has been in the industry long enough for it to matter.
Although, to be fair to UX "professionals" there is no muscle memory so powerful that it cannot be compromised with sufficient alcohol. Still getting 80wpm tonight. But somehow missed the post-anon button. Sometimes the UX "professional" doesn't have to move the clickbox. It's moving on my system, though!
My Microsoft Natural keyboard puts 6 on the left side, so left seems to be pretty standard here in the U.S. as I've had other split keyboards in the past and when I got this one I didn't notice anything weird....
On my current laptop, the number pad also gets used for the easy-to-reach versions of PageUp/PageDown/Home/End and one copy of the Delete Key. Very annoying when I accidentally hit the NumLock.
On my last N laptops, the NumPad means that the keyboard is not in the middle of the laptop, which makes typing uncomfortable and encourages my hands to get off-position, cramps my right shoulder and elbow, and encourages bad typing. Obviously that's not a problem with a separate keyboard like these guys are designing, but on separate keyboards I'd rather have them be smaller (so they fit easily in a rack or on a cluttered desk) or else have bigger typing keys.
The "NumPad Embedded In Keyboard" approach, typically at YUI/HJK/BNM or something similar, never bothered me as much, but then I almost never used it.
Bill Stewart
New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
Unfortunately, one of the features of their split keyboard is that you can fit the two halves together into a one-piece keyboard (which sometimes makes sense to do), and putting a 6 on both halves doesn't work well for that. Maybe if they could put a small, easily-removable extra 6 they could still do it, but that's getting messy.
The big problem with their keyboard? It's that "Mouse" key where the Control key belongs, next to the left pinky, where most current keyboards evilly put a Caps Lock. Having an on-keyboard mouse isn't a bad thing, but the control key is a big ergonomic lossage for most programmers with most keyboards.
Bill Stewart
New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
worked as a 10 key operator at a bank long, long ago, in a life far away. I never shook the 10 key for data entry...anyone else here remember checks ?
errr....umm...*whooosh* *whoosh* Is this thing on ?
Both the 6 and the B keys belong on both sides of a split keyboard. It couldn't possibly cost more than another $1 and we can get back to fighting over real significant, intractable problems, like the Oxford comma.
It depends on which keys I need to press before and after.
Right Hand: Hold Alt Key
Left Hand: Type 54 on numeric keypad
I type all keys with left hand in order to be able to keep my right hand on the mouse, really fast!
Everything I write is lies, read between the lines.
The decision is made for me by my dvorak layout.
&[{}(=*)+]!#
%7531902468`
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As a draftsman, I find myself using the Caps lock key quite a bit. Without it, I'd be sitting on the Shift key for pretty much of the day. No, the Caps lock key is quite useful, thank you very much.
Learning about brewing beer, by brewing beer.
... yeah okay so the picture shows that in their keyboard they're putting the 6 key a couple milometers one way versus the other... but it doesn't matter.
What is more the statement "in some countries people do X instead of Y"... in regards to pressing the six key with the right or left hand... no one gives a shit. People do either and both.
It varies very slightly from one keyboard to the next.
On mine for example... it appears to be so close to the middle that I can't really tell... I've looked at it a few times and it might be going right a bit... by maybe a millimeter. But I have no greater difficulty pressing that button with the right or left hand. So... effectively the middle.
This is silly. Who cares.
I mean, QWERTY itself is silly.
I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
First, I use the Dvorak layout, but this has no effect on the numbers. (It does affect the two keys between 0 and backspace though.) What really has a substantial impact is that I use a keyboard with no stagger. 6 is directly above F (you'd probably have a Y there unless you have a QWERTZ kezboard), which in turn is directly above D (you'd have H there). It's a right hand key, with no ambiguity whatsoever.
You might imagine it is difficult to get used to a matrix keyboard, that you'd have years of stagger-training to unlearn. This is not so, at least if it's set up properly. Practically everyone centers the keyboard, which means the alpha area where you do your actual typing is offset to the left. In this situation, a stagger is helpful. When you push the hands away from you to reach up the keyboard, you naturally drift a bit to the left because of this. Use a keyboard where the alphas are right in front of you (like a Happy Hacking Keyboard, or a TypeMatrix) and reaching directly back will seem as natural as reaching up and slightly left does now. It took me about an hour and a half to make the adjustment, and a minute or two each time I started working for the first few days. I also made one other substantial alteration to the standard Dvorak layout, moving the [ and ] keys into the modifier row to shorten the top row. This puts += back in its usual QWERTY position, but more importantly brings Backspace 3/4" closer. You can look at it here. I also split the spacebar (though both are still Space, no reassigning one to Backspace or anything like that), and rotated the two halves to run up and down the keyboard rather than across it. This allows the hands to rotate inward without forcing a long stretch with the thumb. You'll also see I juggled the modifiers -- eliminating Right Windows entirely, then swapping Control to be next to Alt. Let the rarely accessed Windows and AppsKey keys be the hard ones to reach. Control is just a tuck of the thumb (either thumb) away, assuming I even need it since I have a set of 29 dedicated Ctrl+something keys. They're also arranged in QWERTY order, dodging one of the annoyances of Dvorak, namely that it was invented before the Control key, and long before the current Ctrl-ZXCV "standard". Killing the stagger also reduces the other Dvorak nuisance, the long and awkward reach to L. Being able to rotate the hands inward increases the row-reach of the little finger as well.
Personally I find I can't live with a bunch of overlay modes. I need a full navigation cluster, and use the numeric keypad just enough to get frustrated once or twice a day if it's not there. My answer for that was to put the keypad on the left, which both centers the alphas in front of me and brings the mouse in closer. It would be nice to have a gutter between the numpad and the alphas, but that's not happening until I build my own keyboard.
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You remove your hand from your mouse, move it across your desk, just to hit a number? Then move it back to your mouse to continue working? Or are you just entering numbers for long amounts of time, like an accountant? Because the numeric pad is only useful for entering a lot of numbers, if you only need to enter "6", that seems like a waste of time and energy.
on the numpad
Escher was the first MC and Giger invented the HR department.
I'll take a keyboard that omits Caps Lock wherever they put the 6.
No one's forcing you to use full caps, and I don't think it's wise to encourage removing it. Why should I have to pay for a special "programming keyboard" just to be able to do SQL?
Having touch-typed for a fair time and diligently done my RSA courses back at school, I match fingers to keys pretty consistently. However, looking at this question made me spot a couple things and now I want to know if they're common for formal-ish typists too...
I get neither of these are particularly odd in themselves, but it is more that I have been doing this for over fifteen years, recognising only two or three letter combinations and mentally remapping, but never once noticed.
And typing this is a bit like listening to yourself breathing. It's actually going to drive me crazy.
"I use a base 5 numbering system, you insensitive clods!"
But seriously, as someone who properly learned touch-typing in high school in the '80s, left side 45/RT/FG/VB, right side 67/YU/HJ/NM. But I support having the 6 on both sides of those split keyboards.
For the people whining that they can't fit on both sides, most split keyboards are not edge-to-edge, and it would only be a minor inconvenience for manufacturers to make a double-6.. Just GIS for "split keyboard" In fact, it looks like edge-to-edge is actually less common than 6-on-right!
#naabhaprzrag, #sverubfr-000, #agi-fcbafberq, negvpyr[pynff*=' negvpyr-ary-'] { qvfcynl: abar !vzcbegnag; }
That's still no reason to have it next to the A key. In the early days of computer keyboards, it was a regular-sized key stuck in a corner of the layout. It was only typewriters that had shift-lock (which shifted number keys too!) next to the A key, because it was mechanically simpler to implement. It also took some force to engage it, making it hard to hit by accident, unlike on computer keyboards, where the merest tap on the corner of the caps lock key is enough.
#naabhaprzrag, #sverubfr-000, #agi-fcbafberq, negvpyr[pynff*=' negvpyr-ary-'] { qvfcynl: abar !vzcbegnag; }
When doing a GIS for split keyboards, I noticed that iOS has a split keyboard option for the iPad that puts B on the right side. But it also allows you to use "ghost" keys on either side of the split, so that's okay.
#naabhaprzrag, #sverubfr-000, #agi-fcbafberq, negvpyr[pynff*=' negvpyr-ary-'] { qvfcynl: abar !vzcbegnag; }
I try not to put my hand on the mouse as much as possible. Use keyboard shortcuts in place of mouse clicks, then the number pad is a lot closer and more effective.
And, not surprisingly, the answer to the question is "yes". I also hit the space bar with either hand (right preference, though) and the keys in the middle - "6" and "b" are hit by whichever index finger happens to be free at the time it needs to be hit.
Do you have ESP?
That's only on DOS/Windows, and I think Linux, too. The key works correctly on OS X.
#naabhaprzrag, #sverubfr-000, #agi-fcbafberq, negvpyr[pynff*=' negvpyr-ary-'] { qvfcynl: abar !vzcbegnag; }
"Because people who type all the time don't like to have their wrists twisted"
I use a regular(*) keyboard and my wrists are straight. In the home position, my index fingers are a bit more stretched than my pinky fingers to correct for the angle. I used a MS Natural keyboard around 1997, but I felt that it made my rsi issues worse. Learning about proper desk height and arm/wrist position helped much more, but back then it wasn't so common to have adjustable desks.
(*) Actually, I use a thinkpad keyboard with trackpoint, in Dvorak layout. I even attached an external thinkpad/trackpoint keyboard to my non-thinkpad docking station because I hate that hp elitebook keyboard.
Actually, i'm typing this with my right thumb on a 5-inch phone, in portrait mode... 6666... yep, right hand.
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If you're a lefty you don't have to let go of the mouse to use the numpad That said, a separate "number jack" keyboard makes more sense for a laptop.
"Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
If you're using the number row for inputting numbers instead of 10-key touch you're a pleb and a n00b.
Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
Do you wipe your ass with your left hand or with your right hand?
Also, is your toilet paper roll located to the right or to the left of your toilet? And does it influence your wiping hand decision made above?
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I have never, not even once, in all the time that PCs have had number pads, used the number pad to type a number. I use it for cursor control more than I use a mouse. As much as most people want to get rid of the CapsLock key, I want to get rid of the NumLock key.
Left hand for 5, right hand for 6, like it's supposed to be.
Next question: To capitalize, do you use the Shift key with the hand opposite of the hand typing the capitalized letter? ie.: type "A" with right hand on shift key and "J" with left hand on shift key?
Oh snap, I forgot that nobody cares.
On windows its caps lock, there shift stops the lock. on linux its case-reversing.
Whichever hand is not using the mouse or joystick.
Phones? What are they? 8-)
Linking yourself in fucking circles is not a credible citation. You fail at even the most basic elementary proofing skills.
Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
I generally hit it with my right hand... that's where the number pad lies. I'm not even sure that I use the top row of numbers more than a few times a day.
That said, I just tested out the top row and I reflexively used my left hand to hit the 6.
You remove your hand from your mouse, move it across your desk, just to hit a number?
I have my mouse on the left side, and I use the numpad and the nearby arrow keys with my right hand. It's really the perfect layout for gaming.
And I'm right handed. Using a mouse with my right hand gave me RSI, but not when I used it with the left hand.
Wrong. Microsoft Hardware developed the mice, keyboards and XBox. Since they make decent products, their jobs are now being cut.
Ugh. Not a fan of Windows, use Linux at home for most things... but I love the Microsoft Natural Keyboard. Sad news.
Maybe I should stock up.
Low priority, but it's kindof refreshing to see a tech-related story that only obsessive nerds would care about.
Not that I'm a touch typist. That was a girls school subject when I was at school.
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