Page 3 of 5
Posted: Tue Aug 16, 2005 5:49 pm
by Tigas
QWERTY and QWERTZ
But, I love QWERTY

Posted: Thu Jan 19, 2006 6:37 pm
by arathorn
My
old keyboard didn't like beer so now i have really old basic keyboard.

But my next keyboard will be
Optimus-keyboard. Picture of it's keys below:

Posted: Thu Jan 19, 2006 11:15 pm
by mintoterino
QWERTY
Genius, the cheapest in the store...just 7 euros and works fine indeed!!!

Posted: Sat Jan 21, 2006 7:05 pm
by Matesi1976
QWERTY, Greek layout.
I have had the chance to work with a number of keyboards so far (not a big one) and I consider the most functional keyboard I have used the Swedish QWERTY one.
Posted: Sun Jan 22, 2006 10:20 am
by marcus92
QWERTY, always

Posted: Sun Jan 22, 2006 11:51 am
by Bender
QWERTZ, German Layout..
Posted: Sun Jan 22, 2006 9:32 pm
by giberski
Bender wrote:QWERTZ, German Layout..
I'm not blond, but is there a specific German lay-out which differs from a Dutch QWERTY layout?
Posted: Sun Jan 22, 2006 9:40 pm
by Bender
i don't exactly know what you mean, but in germany we have of course another layout than in the netherlands. for example we have the letters ä ö ü, which were not given in other languages..
here's a picture from a german layout, taken from wikipedia:

Posted: Tue Jan 24, 2006 12:18 am
by Dakkus
Bender wrote:ä ö ü, which were not given in other languages..
Are you /really/ sure languages such as for example Estonian, Finnish, Swedish or Turkish don't have any of those letters? :)
To be precise, in Finnish you can't even replace ö or ä with oe or ae like you can in German, because then those letters would be pronounced separately, producing sounds you might understand if I wrote it this way: a'e and o'e.
So, actually Finnish has ä and ö even more completely than you have them ;)
And the same applies to the Estonian ä and ü. (Their ö-work-alike, õ, doesn't exist in German).
BTW, I must agree the Finnish/Swedish layout is the best QWERTY-like layout out there - as long as you aren't a coder. I have yet to find another layout with a possibility to write such letters as ë, î or ñ without them really existing on the keyboard. If you are interested, the magic is in the key that contains ¨ (¨~^ key alone), ^(shift + ¨~^ key) and ~(AltGr + ¨~^ key). If I want to write ê, I just press shift+¨~^ and then e. The only sad thing is, even this layout is missing such important things as writing caron or the thing the pooped-pants c used for example in French has under itself.
Posted: Tue Jan 24, 2006 2:31 pm
by Bender
oh, then it was my fault, sorry. i thought ä ö ü were in this form only in the egrman language given, but now i know it better than before!
Posted: Tue Jan 24, 2006 4:12 pm
by Dakkus
No problem at all :)
Posted: Tue Jan 24, 2006 4:15 pm
by Dakkus
And BTW, did you people know that slightly over four years ago a difference between Finnish and Swedish keyboard layouts appeared: The Swedish don't need the € sign, so it doesn't always have to be printed on the keyboard ;)
Posted: Sun Jan 29, 2006 8:11 pm
by geldman
I have a old QWERTY keyboard
Posted: Mon Jan 30, 2006 10:48 am
by querty
querty has an azerty.

Posted: Wed Feb 08, 2006 9:14 pm
by eurojuanmi
qwertyuiop