As a financial writer for Newsday, a suburban New York daily, Susan Harrigan had what once was considered one of the safest jobs around: she sat at a desk and typed. The pain in her arms and hands ...
Two years ago, Wayne Westerman, a Ph.D. candidate at the University of Delaware, had a problem. His dissertation was almost due, and he couldn’t type more than one page a day because of repetitive ...
Good news for folks who never bothered to learn touch-typing. A new study shows that you may be just as fast as those show-off keyboard-rattlers whose fingers always find their way back to the home ...
Ferrandino emphasized that the keyboard’s home row is where children begin to develop correct typing and fluency. Going row-by-row, instead of in the traditional column-based approach is easier for ...
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