News

The full-size layout is convenient, providing access to everything from a number pad to a proper nav cluster with arrow keys, and a huge function row that stretches across the top of the entire board.
I got really good at Dvorak several times over the last 25 years and used it for a year or so at one point about 8 years ago. I'm at least 100wpm+ on both QWERTY & Dvorak when I'm used to that layout.
If you can type on QWERTY at 100+ wpm I'd say you don't need Dvorak - in fact, I'd say you're wasting your time with Dvorak. You are attempting to fix something that is very definitely not broken.
Note: Adjusting to a new keyboard layout takes time and effort, especially after years of touch-typing on a QWERTY layout. You'll be slow on Dvorak at first, but will speed up as you use it more.
Patented by August Dvorak in 1936, the layout reduces finger motion by placing all vowels in the middle row on the left side of the keyboard and commonly-used consonants like R, S, T, N, and L on ...
Patented by August Dvorak in 1936, the layout reduces finger motion by placing all vowels in the middle row on the left side of the keyboard and commonly-used consonants like R, S, T, N, and L on ...
iOS 16 addsnative support for the Dvorak keyboard layout. The layout can now be selected in Apple’s software alongside the more traditional QWERTY, AZERTY, and QWERTZ layouts.
To access the Dvorak keyboard, head to your iPhone's "Settings." Then select "General." From there, select "Keyboard" and choose your layout from the options.