I use a Dvorak at home and work, and when I am at another computer (coworker's, parent's, etc), all I have to do is is look at the keys.
I've been a Qwerty touch typist since I took typing in high school (~'88), and decided to switch to being a Dvorak touch typist when I had wrist problems (~'98). In both cases, I'm a touch typist, but I still need to see the keys of the Qwerty layout, which, I guess loses one of the major points of being a touch typist, but oh, well.
Oh, and because I was a touch typist, I got 2 Kinesis Classic QDs for the dual key labels (Qwerty in upper left, Dvorak in lower right). [And since I'm a vi nut, I re-programmed CapsLock to Esc and vice-versa.]
I've been a Qwerty touch typist since I took typing in high school (~'88), and decided to switch to being a Dvorak touch typist when I had wrist problems (~'98). In both cases, I'm a touch typist, but I still need to see the keys of the Qwerty layout, which, I guess loses one of the major points of being a touch typist, but oh, well.
Oh, and because I was a touch typist, I got 2 Kinesis Classic QDs for the dual key labels (Qwerty in upper left, Dvorak in lower right). [And since I'm a vi nut, I re-programmed CapsLock to Esc and vice-versa.]