DEFINITION: The QWERTY (pronounced KWEHR-tee) keyboard is the standard typewriter and computer keyboard in countries that use a Latin-based alphabet. QWERTY refers to the first six letters on the upper row of the keyboard. The key arrangement was devised by Christopher Latham Sholes whose
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One of the most frequently asked questions about the requirements of a KVM over IP system is how much bandwidth does the system use? This document will discuss some of the variables that affect the bandwidth used, and provide measured results...
QWERTY KEYBOARDS DEFINITION (continued): "Type-Writer," as it was then called, was first mass-produced in 1874. Since that time, it has become what may be the most ubiquitous machine-user interface of all time.
The QWERTY arrangement was intended to reduce the jamming of typebars as they moved to strike ink on paper. Separating certain letters from each other on the keyboard reduced the amount of jamming. In 1932, August Dvorak developed what was intended to be a faster keyboard, putting the vowels and the five most common consonants QWERTY Keyboards definition sponsored by WhatIs.com, powered by WhatIs.com an online computer dictionary
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