Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2006/04/10
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]lrzeitlin@optonline.net writes: > > <<I've always wondered at how technology makes such huge leaps over > amazing distances and forgets the > toothbrush. Computer keyboards are another example of a high level of > ergonomics at the brochure level. > Thirty years ago, IBM keypunch machines had a feature that is now lost - > the "F" and "J homekeys were > dished in deeper than the other keys. When PC keyboards came out, my > fingers were lost, and I did not > know why. Looking carefully at the old keyboards, I discovered that > without conscious effort, my fingers > naturally fell into the home keys. Why would such a useful feature > completely disappear from all modern > keyboards?>> > > Gary, > > Apple computer keyboards have little pips on the home keys. Obviously some > people at Apple still touch type. > Stangely enough, the newer keyboards for the PPC and MacIntels have the > pips on the F and J keys, while > the older keyboards have the pips on the D and K keys. I just miss the amazing racket old IBM "clicky" keyboards used to make - I loved those things - you knew what your fingers were doing. -- - Dave Freedom and dignity spring from within the human heart...And inside the human heart is where the impetus for political change must be generated. - Wesley Clark