How easy is it to go back to using staggered keyboards?
I’ve been tempted to switch to ergo, but I’m worried about being able to still use laptops effectively.
I use both regularly, no big issue switching. Don’t worry.
If you are switching regularly back and forth it’s not a big deal. However, if you go for a few months or longer without using a row-staggered keyboard, then you may be in for a bigger adjustment when switching back.
I’ve been almost 100% colstag for a while and now every time I need to use a regular keyboard, it’s a real shitshow.
Initially there was a difference for me, but now I can switch from one to another without a problem if I need to work on laptop keyboard for some reason.
Your brain is way more adaptable than you think. I go between 3 or 4 different keyboard layouts regularly and can use them all just fine. I think the secret is just to force yourself to recall locations from memory even if it takes a moment, only look up the layout if you are totally stuck. It’s also kinda fun to see how weird of a layout your brain can get used to. E.g. one-handed layouts, morse code, stenography etc.
I have a few ortho boards, an horizontal staggered one and use a vertical stagger with strong pinky stagger (+ another with light pinky stagger) ; I can type on all of them but I’m now faster on split vertical stagger, and have to look often at the horizontal stagger one when typing.
On a normal board I was at 90wpm before using split vertical stagger boards full time, now only at 50ish but that’s only because I use those very rarely now. It’s a learning experience, don’t feel afraid to be slower, you can relearn anything in no time
I have three different kinds of keyboards. Regular, Alice and split ergo with columnar stagger. It always takes a little while to get back to speed when I switch boards. But I think that the layouts are different enough so that a distinct muscle memory forms for each one. I guess that the most important thing is that you should be fairly proficient with touch typing on a regular board before trying a different layout. If you are still in the phase of learning, I imagine that it gets really frustrating.
It took me a month to get used to my Corne, mostly because I went split, and 40% (dependent on layers for everything). This was during the pandemic, so I was also WFH and didn’t need to use the laptop keyboard for a couple years.
When my company returned to office, and I started using the laptop occasionally, it took a couple hours to wake up my row-stagger muscle memory, but I’m able to switch between ergo and my laptop without issue.
You’ll be fine. Just be patient as your muscle memory adapts.
At first it was pretty hard, but I found that it became easier once I built up muscle memory for my Colemak-DH column stagger split keyboard. Suddenly switching between the split and my MacBook keyboard started working again.