They are arranged to put the most used characters, in English, within the shortest distance of the strongest fingers. In order for the strong fingers, these are - EATONSIHR.
110
eight key's
Qwerty, and Dvorak. Pertaining to the layout of the keys.
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.
No, the keys on a typical computer keyboard are not in the order of the alphabet. Two popular keyboard designs (based on the order of letters on the first row) are QWERTY and DVORAK.
Modern keyboard keys are arranged according to the QWERTY design by Christopher Sholes.
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 Simplified Keyboard is an alternative keyboard layout designed to improve typing efficiency and ergonomic comfort by placing the most commonly used keys on the home row. It is named after its creator, Dr. August Dvorak.
Mr. Dvorak
The standard North American English keyboard is copied from the standard English language typewriter. The letters were arranged on the typewriter to slow the typist down and prevent keys from jambing. This is called the QWERTY keyboard. The Dvorak keyboard arrangement was designed to permit faster keying, but is not widely used because so many people are comfortable with the QWERTY arrangement.
they arranged it from the top row to the bracket on the keyboard.
dvorak keyboard is fastest