Why Liebowitz and Margolis are right
Dvorak advocates will no doubt be aware of the paper, “The Fable of the Keys,” by Stan Liebowitz and Stephen E. Margolis, in which they claim that there is no advantage to Dvorak over qwerty.
It’s a hotly debated argument, because Dvorak typists are convinced that their layout does have an advantage, if you persevere long enough at it.
“The Fable of the Keys” is rebutted by an essay entitled “The Fable of the Fable.” Like the original essay, it is full of argument and counter-argument, discussions of the relative merits of different studies, accusations and counter-accusations.
Quite frankly, both essays are excruciatingly boring. If you have to resort to dense academic prose, arguments based on the validity of disputed studies, and all the rest of it to make your point, and at the end of it not everybody is convinced, something is wrong with your point.
The Fable of the Fable asserts that Liebowitz and Margolis are claiming that Dvorak is no better than qwerty. However, this is a straw man: if you read their paper carefully, you will realise that they are claiming nothing of the sort. What Liebowitz and Margolis are actually claiming is that the advantages of Dvorak do not outweigh the cost of switching.
This is something that many failed Dvorakists would agree with. It is so difficult to switch from qwerty to Dvorak that the majority of people give up after weeks of zero productivity and intense frustration, convinced that it is nothing but snake oil.
So Liebowitz and Margolis are right about Dvorak. However, if they said the same thing about Colemak, they would be obviously, glaringly wrong.
A simple case of “suck it and see” would tell you that. It takes only a few hours of typing Colemak, if that, to notice that there is an advantage over qwerty in terms of both discipline and comfort. The effort involved in switching is pretty small, as you don’t have to abandon qwerty and your productivity in the early stages. Two hours a day of Colemak will get you a usable speed in only a week or so. And I defy anyone to spend a month on Colemak and then tell me they still think qwerty is better.

