Shados
Professional Snake Miner
It's pretty obvious, really: dividing up the keyboard into regions and assigning one finger to each means you can hit more keys in the same amount of time because you have to move any given finger less on average. Can, not necessarily will, but generally most people who are fast typers and don't touch-type "properly" will be faster once they've learned to.I always got yelled at by our typing teacher in elementary/middle school for not using the homerow method, but they gave up when I was constantly typing miles faster than everybody else.
Honest opinion, if you can NOT stare at your hands/keyboard while you type and you type at a decent rate, then it doesn't honestly matter. Never did fully understand why the "home row" was supposedly better.
Speaking from experience and that of a few people I know (and assuming our experiences translate to other people at all), if you're interested in learning to touch-type correctly just get a software typing tutor program - preferably one with specific 'lessons' as well as general/specific training routines. Use it for maybe 30 minutes or so to pick up the layout/finger->key mapping etc., then use it for 5-15 minutes each day, and critically, touch-type for all other typing you do. Yes, you will most definitely be excruciatingly slow for a while, but hey, that's good incentive to learn faster. Generally speaking you'll likely be slower for up to a week or so, on par with your old method for a similar amount of time, and then you'll see consistent improvements for several weeks/months - assuming you keep up with actively using a typing tutor each day in addition to touch-typing for normal usage.
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