
I'm out of practice *shrug*

I'll give it a couple more goes and see what happens.
Ahh good point. Cobretti, you have the title..... for nowsinfiery wrote:Afraid not, those challenges are a lot easier than the actual races and also don't count towards the leaderboard. Cobretti killin it.
But yeah, I believe the 140+
148TrialLawyer16 wrote:Ahh good point. Cobretti, you have the title..... for nowsinfiery wrote:Afraid not, those challenges are a lot easier than the actual races and also don't count towards the leaderboard. Cobretti killin it.
But yeah, I believe the 140+lol
Want to continue reading?
Absolutely FREE!
Already a member? Login
geez. I finally broke 70 and was happy about that...Cobretti wrote:148TrialLawyer16 wrote:Ahh good point. Cobretti, you have the title..... for nowsinfiery wrote:Afraid not, those challenges are a lot easier than the actual races and also don't count towards the leaderboard. Cobretti killin it.
But yeah, I believe the 140+lol
Probably. That's a pretty boomer way of typing.Micdiddy wrote:Am I the only one itt who looks at the keyboard and pecks? Fml.
Poor Anne...M458 wrote: http://i.imgur.com/ER6VXtG.jpg
Register now!
It's still FREE!
Already a member? Login
Her?KD35 wrote:Poor Anne...M458 wrote: http://i.imgur.com/ER6VXtG.jpg
Actually, the standard QWERTY layout was intended to slow typists down - originally, back in the day of manual typewriters, people could type faster than the typewriter could keep up, and the keys kept getting jammed. So enter QWERTY, intended to ensure people couldn't type quickly enough to jam the keys and screw up the machine. Obviously, that's obsolete now. (You can get apps that will reprogram your keyboard/keyboards laid out differently, for more efficient layouts. But I'm so used to QWERTY that I don't think I could adjust - even typing on keyboards in foreign countries, where things like the punctuation marks are often in different places, makes me nuts.)untar614 wrote:seeing all your ridiculous typing speeds, I've been trying to improve my own, and teaching myself to type the "correct, formal way". In doing so, I've realized just how terribly the keyboard is laid out. Seriously, why the hell are the comma and period keys down there while the semicolon is on the home row? Are people using tons of semicolons that I'm just not aware of? And way is backspace so far away? It makes every little mistake a disaster to typing speed. Typeracer is starting to piss me off because I keep getting hit with pieces containing a bunch of unusual punctuation and slang and whatnot.
I'm seriously considering buying a new keyboard with a split spacebar and getting some key stickers to reformat the layout for a few of the keys.
Get unlimited access to all forums and topics
I'm pretty sure I told you it's FREE...
Already a member? Login
Yeah, that's the thing - I'm already fairly used to the QWERTY layout, even if the homerow deal I'm still getting used to. Otherwise I'd be all over getting a Dvorak keyboard. I'd probably just make a few changes, like moving some of the punctuation keys around and making a backspace key where I can closely reach it. I tend to space with my left thumb, so if I get a split spacebar, I'd have to switch the formatting around for that.A. Nony Mouse wrote:Actually, the standard QWERTY layout was intended to slow typists down - originally, back in the day of manual typewriters, people could type faster than the typewriter could keep up, and the keys kept getting jammed. So enter QWERTY, intended to ensure people couldn't type quickly enough to jam the keys and screw up the machine. Obviously, that's obsolete now. (You can get apps that will reprogram your keyboard/keyboards laid out differently, for more efficient layouts. But I'm so used to QWERTY that I don't think I could adjust - even typing on keyboards in foreign countries, where things like the punctuation marks are often in different places, makes me nuts.)untar614 wrote:seeing all your ridiculous typing speeds, I've been trying to improve my own, and teaching myself to type the "correct, formal way". In doing so, I've realized just how terribly the keyboard is laid out. Seriously, why the hell are the comma and period keys down there while the semicolon is on the home row? Are people using tons of semicolons that I'm just not aware of? And way is backspace so far away? It makes every little mistake a disaster to typing speed. Typeracer is starting to piss me off because I keep getting hit with pieces containing a bunch of unusual punctuation and slang and whatnot.
I'm seriously considering buying a new keyboard with a split spacebar and getting some key stickers to reformat the layout for a few of the keys.
How much would a "better" keyboard layout even result though? I can't imagine one would be much faster, even after spending vast amounts of time practicing/learning a new way.untar614 wrote:Yeah, that's the thing - I'm already fairly used to the QWERTY layout, even if the homerow deal I'm still getting used to. Otherwise I'd be all over getting a Dvorak keyboard. I'd probably just make a few changes, like moving some of the punctuation keys around and making a backspace key where I can closely reach it. I tend to space with my left thumb, so if I get a split spacebar, I'd have to switch the formatting around for that.A. Nony Mouse wrote:Actually, the standard QWERTY layout was intended to slow typists down - originally, back in the day of manual typewriters, people could type faster than the typewriter could keep up, and the keys kept getting jammed. So enter QWERTY, intended to ensure people couldn't type quickly enough to jam the keys and screw up the machine. Obviously, that's obsolete now. (You can get apps that will reprogram your keyboard/keyboards laid out differently, for more efficient layouts. But I'm so used to QWERTY that I don't think I could adjust - even typing on keyboards in foreign countries, where things like the punctuation marks are often in different places, makes me nuts.)untar614 wrote:seeing all your ridiculous typing speeds, I've been trying to improve my own, and teaching myself to type the "correct, formal way". In doing so, I've realized just how terribly the keyboard is laid out. Seriously, why the hell are the comma and period keys down there while the semicolon is on the home row? Are people using tons of semicolons that I'm just not aware of? And way is backspace so far away? It makes every little mistake a disaster to typing speed. Typeracer is starting to piss me off because I keep getting hit with pieces containing a bunch of unusual punctuation and slang and whatnot.
I'm seriously considering buying a new keyboard with a split spacebar and getting some key stickers to reformat the layout for a few of the keys.
Well, Dvorak/other alternates are supposed to be faster, in terms of things like which letters you often type together and so on. Don't know how it works in practice, though, because I've never tried.KD35 wrote:How much would a "better" keyboard layout even result though? I can't imagine one would be much faster, even after spending vast amounts of time practicing/learning a new way.
Communicate now with those who not only know what a legal education is, but can offer you worthy advice and commentary as you complete the three most educational, yet challenging years of your law related post graduate life.
Already a member? Login
Now there's a charge.
Just kidding ... it's still FREE!
Already a member? Login