In 1955, the Dvorak layout got its big break when the United States government's General Services Administration agreed to conduct an experiment to determine whether the QWERTY or Dvorak layout was faster. Dvorak predicted that his typewriter would "increase the typing speed of the average stenographer by 35 per cent."🏁
# | Player | Time | Duration | Accuracy | WPM | pp | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | |||||||
2 | |||||||
3 | |||||||
4 | |||||||
5 | |||||||
6 | |||||||
7 | |||||||
8 | |||||||
9 | |||||||
10 |
In 1955, the Dvorak layout got its big break when the United States government's General Services Administration agreed to conduct an experiment to determine whether the QWERTY or Dvorak layout was faster. Dvorak predicted that his typewriter would "increase the typing speed of the average stenographer by 35 per cent."🏁