In 1874 Remington & Sons manufactured the first commercial
typewriter, called the Remington Number 1. This typewriter was designed by
Christopher Sholes and used the "QWERTY" keyboard we are
all familiar with.
This early typewriter used a mechanism with characters on the end of a bar. When a key was struck, a linkage would swing the bar into a tape coated with ink. When the character struck the tape, the impression of the character was transferred onto the paper, which was positioned behind the tape.
Sholes' original
prototypes had a problem with the bars colliding with each other and jamming.
So the story goes that he arranged the keys with the most common letters in
hard to reach spots, to slow typists down and tries to avoid this problem.
Whatever the reason
for the QWERTY layout, it seems pretty unlikely that one of the first keyboard
layouts invented would be perfect. The QWERTY keyboard is very different from
the Dvorak keyboard layout. The Dvorak keyboard layout tries
to minimize the distance traveled by the fingers. It also tries to make the
typist alternate hands on consecutive letters as often as possible.
The Dvorak layout
places all of the most commonly used letters in the home row so your fingers
don't have to move at all to hit these keys. The left hand has all of the
vowels and some consonants and the right hand has only consonants. So there are
very few words in the English language that can be typed with only one hand on
the Dvorak keyboard (two are "papaya" and "opaque"). Both
"pumpkin" and "minimum" can be typed with one hand on a
QWERTY keyboard -- give it a try.
This site shows the layout of the Dvorak keyboard. If I had typed
this article on a Dvorak keyboard, my fingers would have traveled 30 meters
versus the 54 meters they traveled on the QWERTY keyboard I use.
Some argue, however,
the Dvorak keyboard is no more efficient than QWERTY. An independent study in
1956 showed that QWERTY typists and Dvorak typists had about the same rate of
speed, and continued studies don't show a clear winner between the two. This
may explain why QWERTY is still the standard.
If you want to see for
yourself, you can switch your keyboard to a Dvorak configuration just by
changing a setting on your computer's operating system. Depending on your keyboard, you may even be able to pry
off the keys and rearrange them in the Dvorak layout.