I am learning to use stenographic typing, and I have made enough progress to type up this post. Slowly. You have no clue how long this is taking. But I can write, slowly, and that is enough to make it easier to learn more and to practice more.
I hope to get much, much faster at this. It is a simple matter of practice, though. I am doing a lot of stopping and looking stuff up, and that is where most of my time is spent.
150 WPM is my long term goal. At that point it is better than anything I could get from a qwerty layout, even with infinite practice.
I’m curious how useful this ends up being. Once you’re well above qwerty speed, please let us know whether it increases writing speed as well as typing speed.
The cost of entry is now almost entirely a time/focus/attention cost, rather than getting equipment and software and professional training. If I had or was a child, I’d recommend learning this—it’s a valuable and useful skill, and the opportunity costs are lower for non-adults.
I am learning to use stenographic typing, and I have made enough progress to type up this post. Slowly. You have no clue how long this is taking. But I can write, slowly, and that is enough to make it easier to learn more and to practice more.
I hope to get much, much faster at this. It is a simple matter of practice, though. I am doing a lot of stopping and looking stuff up, and that is where most of my time is spent.
150 WPM is my long term goal. At that point it is better than anything I could get from a qwerty layout, even with infinite practice.
Links:
http://plover.stenoknight.com/
https://sites.google.com/site/ploverdoc/
http://qwertysteno.com/Home/
https://github.com/caru/StenoTutor
I’m curious how useful this ends up being. Once you’re well above qwerty speed, please let us know whether it increases writing speed as well as typing speed.
my QWERTY speed is 90 WPM, so I will give another update then.
I currently hold the dubious “benefit” of valuing my time at under ten dollars an hour. I hope to improve that, though, and hope this helps.
I know Mirabai Knight, of stenoknight. She’s a great person and doing strong work in lower the cost of entry to becoming a stenographer.
The cost of entry is now almost entirely a time/focus/attention cost, rather than getting equipment and software and professional training. If I had or was a child, I’d recommend learning this—it’s a valuable and useful skill, and the opportunity costs are lower for non-adults.