Christopher Sholes (February 14, 1819 - February 17, 1890)
The QWERTY layout was invented in the 1870s by Christopher Latham Sholes, primarily for use in typewriters. Its design aimed to reduce the likelihood of jamming by placing frequently used letter pairs farther apart, allowing for smoother typing. The layout has since become the standard for English-language keyboards, largely due to its widespread adoption and the momentum of established usage.
The QWERTY keyboard used in most modern English language computers was invented by Christopher Sholes in 1874. The layout has been modified and added to many times since then.
QWERTY
The layout of a QWERTY keyboard was engineered for the early mechanical typewriters, in order to avoid clashes of keys as much as possible.
It is because the qwerty keyboard is used universally. Most people are used to the qwerty keyboard layout but there are some keyboard layout that you can also consider the devorak and colemak
qwerty
The layout of a QWERTY keyboard was engineered for the early mechanical typewriters, in order to avoid clashes of keys as much as possible.
Qwerty, and Dvorak. Pertaining to the layout of the keys.
QWERTY is a Keyboard layout. Most keyboards use this layout. Simply look at the top line of your letter keys, reading left to right to see your layout. ps....it's 'refers' not 'referrs'.
QWERTY - seriously that is what it is called.
QWERTY .
This qwerty layout was devised and created in the early 1870s by Christopher Latham Sholes. The patent was filed on October 1867.