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Why are all the letter keys scrambled all over the keyboard?

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the ABCs on the laptop or keyboard scrambled.

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  1. The name "QWERTY" for our typewriter keyboard comes from the first six letters in the top alphabet row (the one just below the numbers). It is also called the "Universal" keyboard for rather obvious reasons. It was the work of inventor C. L. Sholes, who put together the prototypes of the first commercial typewriter in a Milwaukee machine shop back in the 1860's.

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    For years, popular writers have accused Sholes of deliberately arranging his keyboard to slow down fast typists who would otherwise jam up his sluggish machine. In fact, his motives were just the opposite.

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    When Sholes built his first model in 1868, the keys were arranged alphabetically in two rows. At the time, Milwaukee was a backwoods town. The crude machine shop tools available there could hardly produce a finely-honed instrument that worked with precision. Yes, the first typewriter was sluggish. Yes, it did clash and jam when someone tried to type with it. But Sholes was able to figure out a way around the problem simply by rearranging the letters. Looking inside his early machine, we can see how he did it.

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    The first typewriter had its letters on the end of rods called "typebars." The typebars hung in a circle. The roller which held the paper sat over this circle, and when a key was pressed, a typebar would swing up to hit the paper from underneath. If two typebars were near each other in the circle, they would tend to clash into each other when typed in succession. So, Sholes figured he had to take the most common letter pairs such as "TH" and make sure their typebars hung at safe distances.

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    He did this using a study of letter-pair frequency prepared by educator Amos Densmore, brother of James Densmore, who was Sholes' chief financial backer. The QWERTY keyboard itself was determined by the existing mechanical linkages of the typebars inside the machine to the keys on the outside. Sholes' solution did not eliminate the problem completely, but it was greatly reduced.

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    The keyboard arrangement was considered important enough to be included on Sholes' patent granted in 1878 (see drawing), some years after the machine was into production. QWERTY's effect, by reducing those annoying clashes, was to speed up typing rather than slow it down.

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    Sholes and Densmore went to Remington, the arms manufacturer, to have their machines mass-produced. In 1874, the first Type-Writer appeared on the market. No contemporary account complains about the illogical keyboard. In fact, few contemporary accounts even mention the machine at all. At its debut, it was largely ignored.

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    Sales of the typewriter did not take off until after Remington's second model was introduced in 1878, offering the only major modification to the keyboard as we know it today.

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    The first machines typed only capital letters. The new Remington No. 2 offered both upper and lower case by adding the familiar shift key. It is called a shift because it actually caused the carriage to shift in position for printing either of two letters on each typebar. Modern electronic machines no longer shift mechanically when the shift key is pressed, but its name remains the same.

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    In the decades following the original Remington, many alternative keyboards came and went. Then, in 1932, with funds from the Carnegie Foundation, Professor August Dvorak, of Washington State University, set out to develop the ultimate typewriter keyboard once and for all.

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    Dvorak went beyond Blickensderfer in arranging his letters according to frequency. Dvorak's home row uses all five vowels and the five most common consonants: AOEUIDHTNS. With the vowels on one side and consonants on the other, a rough typing rhythm would be established as each hand would tend to alternate.

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    With the Dvorak keyboard, a typist can type about 400 of the English language's most common words without ever leaving the home row. The comparable figure on QWERTY is 100. The home row letters on Dvorak do a total of 70% of the work. On QWERTY they do only 32%.

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    The Dvorak keyboard sounds very good. However, a keyboard need to do more than just "sound" good, and unfortunately, Dvorak has failed to prove itself superior to QWERTY. It appears that many of the studies used to test the effectiveness of Dvorak were flawed. Many were conducted by the good professor himself, creating a conflict of interest question, since he had a financial interest in the venture. A U.S. General Services Administration study of 1953 appears to have been more objective. It found that it really didn't matter what keyboard you used. Good typists type fast, bad typists don't.

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    It's not surprising, then, that Dvorak has failed to take hold. No one wants to take the time and trouble to learn a new keyboard, especially if it isn't convincingly superior to the old. A few computer programs and special-order daisy wheels are available to transform modern typewriters or word processors to the Dvorak keyboard, but the demand for these produc


  2. They a arranged is such a way that  most frequently used alphabets and easily accesible to oru fingers, this is called a 'qwerty' arrangment

  3. Ask the guy who invented the keyboard

  4. It's because a long time ago there was something called a typewriter.

    Early typewriters had a habit of jamming up when people typed too quickly so to try to prevent that happening the keys were moved around so that the typebars of commonly used letter combinations (not the actual keys themselves) were far away from each other which reduced the tendency of the typebars to jam together.  This arrangement because the first keys were QWERTY is called the QWERTY keyboard.  It doesn't seem to be any better or worse ergonomically than an alphabetic keyboard (although pretty much no attention was paid to such things back then, despite what some may say no attention was given to the speed of typists in the design of QWERTY or even anything other than reducing jams) but it ended up becoming the standard anyway (even though the problem with the typebars jamming was eventually solved and of course not an issue with computers).

    The Dvorak keyboard which was designed specifically to put the keys in the correct place does seem to be superior in speed (with the only study that shows no difference between Dvorak and QWERTY having major methodological flaws which make it essentially invalid, although more study (along with other layouts that have been proposed) would be nice) and probably also causes less RSI than QWERTY although the need to retrain and the possibility that a person may need to use QWERTY keyboards anyway means it hasn't taken hold (it's not the first time that a superior technology lost out to something inferior that happened to be first).

    Typewriters also resulted in another ergonomically inferior compromise in that it is easier to build typewriters if the keys are slightly offset (which is why they aren't right on top of each other) even though having the keys line up is better but pretty much everyone is used to the staggered arrangement and learning a modified keyboard does take some time.

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