Re: Usability for touch typers: Keeping fingers on F and J

2014-11-20 Thread Thomas Güttler
Am 19.11.2014 um 10:07 schrieb Chow Loong Jin:
 
 I'm happily touch-typing on a QWERTY keyboard (Thinkpad X230 user here) at
 120WPM. I don't really have much of a problem hitting backspace or 
 return/enter.
 I'm also an Emacs user, and the only thing that really bothered me was the
 location of the Ctrl key, which my CapsLock key has become. For backspace and
 return, I usually flick my wrist clockwise and back. Pinky goes on the Enter
 key, and fourth finger goes on the Backspace key. It doesn't seem to affect my
 wrist too much when I do that.
 
 I get RSI pains occasionally, but they stopped being much of a problem after I
 found this useful video[1] on stretching your muscles when they ache. I 
 believe
 that in my case at least, the RSI pains are just muscle fatigue in the same 
 way
 your calves burn after a strenuous run.
 
 What could the current situation be improved?
 
 Nothing that wouldn't break the collective muscle memories of Ubuntu users
 unfortunately. Remapping the backspace and enter keys aren't really an option 
 if
 you want to keep things usable for end-users.
 

Usability is on my mind. That's why don't want to use alternative keyboard 
layouts like neo or colemak.

I want an extension, not a replacement.

Creating a new layer with the CapsLock key could be an solution.

I hope I have time to create a table of my requirements before 2015.

I will post a link here.

Emacs was my favorite editor until I switched to pyCharm. Emacs works
good for touch typers. Copy+Paste with ctrl-k ctrl-y feels like flying.
I started to configure pyCharm  but then I realised: Why modify this single
program for ergonomic touch typing? I want ergonomic touch typing everywhere!

  Thomas


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Re: Usability for touch typers: Keeping fingers on F and J

2014-11-20 Thread Chow Loong Jin
On Thu, Nov 20, 2014 at 02:34:11PM +0100, Thomas Güttler wrote:
 Am 19.11.2014 um 10:07 schrieb Chow Loong Jin:
  
  I'm happily touch-typing on a QWERTY keyboard (Thinkpad X230 user here) at
  120WPM. I don't really have much of a problem hitting backspace or 
  return/enter.
  I'm also an Emacs user, and the only thing that really bothered me was the
  location of the Ctrl key, which my CapsLock key has become. For backspace 
  and
  return, I usually flick my wrist clockwise and back. Pinky goes on the Enter
  key, and fourth finger goes on the Backspace key. It doesn't seem to affect 
  my
  wrist too much when I do that.
  
  I get RSI pains occasionally, but they stopped being much of a problem 
  after I
  found this useful video[1] on stretching your muscles when they ache. I 
  believe
  that in my case at least, the RSI pains are just muscle fatigue in the same 
  way
  your calves burn after a strenuous run.
  
  What could the current situation be improved?
  
  Nothing that wouldn't break the collective muscle memories of Ubuntu users
  unfortunately. Remapping the backspace and enter keys aren't really an 
  option if
  you want to keep things usable for end-users.
  
 
 Usability is on my mind. That's why don't want to use alternative keyboard 
 layouts like neo or colemak.
 
 I want an extension, not a replacement.
 
 Creating a new layer with the CapsLock key could be an solution.

Which would then break things for the CapsLock as Control people.

 I hope I have time to create a table of my requirements before 2015.
 
 I will post a link here.
 
 Emacs was my favorite editor until I switched to pyCharm. Emacs works
 good for touch typers. Copy+Paste with ctrl-k ctrl-y feels like flying.
 I started to configure pyCharm  but then I realised: Why modify this 
 single
 program for ergonomic touch typing? I want ergonomic touch typing everywhere!

Gtk+ has emacs keybindings if you wish set it somewhere in gsettings, but as we
all know, emacs keybindings aren't really very standard, so we can't use that as
default without confusing everyone.

-- 
Kind regards,
Loong Jin


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Re: Usability for touch typers: Keeping fingers on F and J

2014-11-20 Thread Thomas Güttler



Am 21.11.2014 um 05:45 schrieb Chow Loong Jin:

On Thu, Nov 20, 2014 at 02:34:11PM +0100, Thomas Güttler wrote:

Am 19.11.2014 um 10:07 schrieb Chow Loong Jin:


I'm happily touch-typing on a QWERTY keyboard (Thinkpad X230 user here) at
120WPM. I don't really have much of a problem hitting backspace or return/enter.
I'm also an Emacs user, and the only thing that really bothered me was the
location of the Ctrl key, which my CapsLock key has become. For backspace and
return, I usually flick my wrist clockwise and back. Pinky goes on the Enter
key, and fourth finger goes on the Backspace key. It doesn't seem to affect my
wrist too much when I do that.

I get RSI pains occasionally, but they stopped being much of a problem after I
found this useful video[1] on stretching your muscles when they ache. I believe
that in my case at least, the RSI pains are just muscle fatigue in the same way
your calves burn after a strenuous run.


What could the current situation be improved?


Nothing that wouldn't break the collective muscle memories of Ubuntu users
unfortunately. Remapping the backspace and enter keys aren't really an option if
you want to keep things usable for end-users.



Usability is on my mind. That's why don't want to use alternative keyboard 
layouts like neo or colemak.

I want an extension, not a replacement.

Creating a new layer with the CapsLock key could be an solution.


Which would then break things for the CapsLock as Control people.


I don't know the percentage of ubuntu users who have modified the CapsLock 
mapping. What's your guess?


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Re: Usability for touch typers: Keeping fingers on F and J

2014-11-20 Thread Chow Loong Jin
On Fri, Nov 21, 2014 at 08:24:07AM +0100, Thomas Güttler wrote:
 [...] 
 I don't know the percentage of ubuntu users who have modified the CapsLock
 mapping. What's your guess?

No idea. Probably half of the Emacs users.

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Kind regards,
Loong Jin


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