I had the oddest reaction to the test: I couldn’t take it. As a touch-typist and a Dvorak keyboardist, I could not easily remember where the “I” and the “E” keys were, since the keys themselves remain labeled in the more traditional style. I can’t help but wonder if that qualifies as a bias all its own.
I type colemak, but for the test I temporarily swapped back. The E and I are conveniently spaced out in QWERTY, and you only have to locate them once, as Nebu pointed out.
I had the oddest reaction to the test: I couldn’t take it. As a touch-typist and a Dvorak keyboardist, I could not easily remember where the “I” and the “E” keys were, since the keys themselves remain labeled in the more traditional style. I can’t help but wonder if that qualifies as a bias all its own.
They instruct you to rest your hands on those keys, and never remove your hands.
So you only need to find those keys once, before the test begins.
I type colemak, but for the test I temporarily swapped back. The E and I are conveniently spaced out in QWERTY, and you only have to locate them once, as Nebu pointed out.
DvAssist