The Dvorak Simplified Keyboard (pronounced /ˈdvoɹæk/) is a keyboard layout patented in 1936 by Dr. August Dvorak, an educational psychologist and professor of education[1] at the University of Washington in Seattle,[2] and William Dealey as an alternative to the more common QWERTY layout. It has also been called the Simplified Keyboard or American Simplified Keyboard, but is commonly known as the Dvorak keyboardor Dvorak layout. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dvorak_keyboard For a simple explanation through comics, go to http://www.dvzine.org
keyboard
From Dr. August Dvorak, one of its inventors.
Qwerty is the most common keyboard layout
lol the answer is your mom
A QWERTY-type keyboard has the layout of semi-randomly placed keys on a keyboard. The layout was created to slow down fast typists using an ABC-type keyboard, as older typewriters could not handle fast typing speeds without jamming errors. The layout does not show a pattern of the alphabet. This is the most popular type of keyboard, and is widely accepted for all uses. A ABC-type keyboard has the layout of neatly placed keys on a keyboard, in alphabetical order. This layout is not popular at all, and is not widely accepted, for modern reasons. Going from the QWERTY format to an ABC-type format would take much adjustment.
The country that the keyboard was invented in depends on which type of keyboard. The musical keyboard and computer keyboards were invented in different countries.
Mr. Dvorak
dvorak keyboard is fastest
This is the layout of a standard dvorak keyboard. Obviously, it's very different from qwertys.
a dvorak keyboard is a keyboard made by dr.dvorak use for typing things sush as: letters,checks,books,etc.
a dvorak keyboard is a keyboard made by dr.dvorak use for typing things sush as: letters,checks,books,etc.
From Dr. August Dvorak, one of its inventors.
The inventor of the most widely used keyboard layout, the QWERTY keyboard, was Christopher Sholes. The inventor of the highly efficient Dvorak keyboard was Dr. August Dvorak.
The inventor of the most widely used keyboard layout, the QWERTY keyboard, was Christopher Sholes. The inventor of the highly efficient Dvorak keyboard was Dr. August Dvorak.
The "opposite" of a QWERTY keyboard would be not having a keyboard. There are several styles available for computer keyboards, none of which are "opposites" of either QWERTY or each other. They are simply different arrangements of keys. Alternatives include Dvorak, AZERTY, and QWERTZ.
The Dvorak keyboard is one alternbative keyboard layout.
The keyboard was named after Dr. August Dvorak. In 1936, Dr. Dvorak came up with a plan to standardize the letter keys on the keyboard for a typewriter. The nickname for the Dvorak keyboard that is still used today is the QWERTY keyboard because of the placement of the left hand, top line letters.
1932