Quote from www.wikipedia.org QWERTY (pronounced /ˈkwɝti/) is the most common modern-day keyboard layout on English-language computer and typewriter keyboards. It takes its name from the first six characters seen in the far left of the keyboard's top first row of letters. The QWERTY design was patented [1] by Christopher Sholes in 1874[2] and sold to Remington in the same year, when it first appeared in typewriters.
The QWERTY layout was designed to reduce frequency of hammer clashes on a manual typewriter and the resulting jams.
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 is the name of a keyboard layout, originally designed to prevent jams that occurred when the keys clashed together. They're most commonly used on personal computers and mobile phones. QWERTY are the first six letters from left to right on the top letter row of your keyboard.
Qwerty is the most common keyboard layout
QWERTY .
Qwerty, and Dvorak. Pertaining to the layout of the keys.
The layout of a QWERTY keyboard was engineered for the early mechanical typewriters, in order to avoid clashes of keys as much as possible.
1873 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christopher_Sholes
The usual keyboard, with the first line of letters reading 'qwertyuiop'.
Yes, they have a standard keyboard layout.