Originally Posted By: Gordon Scott
<...snip...>
A new more consistent, more ergonomic interface might be the push needed.
A new but different interface than needs learning over may be a strong dissuader.
Unfortunately I can't say which would be dominant for anyone but me. :-(


A good example of this is the QWERTY keyboard.

The QWERTY arrangement was designed to slow your speed of typing. In the early days of typewriters, fast typists would jam the keys, so QWERTY was invented.

A relative of the composer Antonin Dvorak invented the DVORAK keyboard system, which put the most used letters in the most favorable positions, allowing people to type quicker.

In the early days of PCs, there was a software switch to change your keyboard from the QWERTY to the DVORAK. But people already knew how to type on the QWERTY and didn't want to learn the new system.

Various transposing un-piano-keyboard synths have been proposed, but none of them have caught on either.

Most people comfortable with a complex skill are reluctant to go back to square one.

Insights and incites by Notes ♫

Last edited by Notes Norton; 06/21/22 03:06 AM.

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