Brian8bit wrote:That's your unwillingness to adapt that is the problem. Not a problem with ANSI.
Well, I don't know why one should adapt to machines instead of having machines to adapt to one's wishes.
I learned typing long, long ago on a mechanical typewriter. Then I adapted to an electric typewriter where carriage return still was manual. Then I adapted a to a typewriter with a spherical printhead instead of levers and without a carriage. Then I adapted to a typewriter with double pitch (10 and 12). Then I adapted to a daisy-wheel typewriter which did not print a line until it was completed. Then I adapted to a dedicated word processing machine. Then I adapted to a computer, using WordPerfect. Then I adapted to MS Word (I had to). And every time, I had to adapt to new keyboard layouts with new functions on new keys or added to the existing ones. And since I mostly type in French but live in Germany, I first learned typing on a German keyboard and then switched to French layout (I am now proficient on both).
I would call myself an adept of adaptation
There are two things I never wanted to adapt to, though: function keys on top of the alphanumerical pad - and ANSI layout. Not that I would not be able to cope with them, but for my purposes function keys on the left of the alphanumerical pad and ISO layout are just the best choice. Function keys on the left because all shortcuts using them can be pressed just with one hand intuitively and without having to look (try that with Alt+F9 on your keyboard), and ISO because I type fast and often have to hit the Enter key from a position when my fingers are not back on the home row yet but still higher, making an Enter key extending upon two rows the better choice.
Other arguments against ANSI: the missing key the position of which is occupied by the long left Shift key, and the most important argument in my eyes: the silly shape of the key above the Enter key, which is bigger not because its use justifies it, but just because there is room to fill.
I always wonder how people can spend such a lot on keyboards because of their "awesome" looks without objecting to such a design abomination
