toddhicks209 wrote:After doing this shift, you can easily get your hands back to the normal position and resume typing. If you always stay in your comfort zone and don't give tips that can help you improve a try, you can only go so far. The tip I have just given is part of touch typing (i.e. hitting all keys with the right fingers in all situations).
I don't consider this an overall favorable shift. You're delegating more key-presses and finger shifts to your pinky/4th finger, which, as the weaker fingers, have in my experience always been my more typo-prone ones. I do see this being a favorable shift for words like "tree" and "greet," but definitely an unfavorable shift for words like "league" and "greatness."
Additionally, loading on extra, circumstantial finger patterns is the last thing your usual typist should be doing to improve. Sean Wrona is gifted with a ridiculous capability and affinity for such tasks, but the rest of us aren't.
Fast typing leans
heavily on familiarity and comfort with both the keyboard and the words being typed, and, in general, efforts should be made to increase this familiarity, not to introduce new variables that further complicate things.
Out of curiosity, how quickly do you actually type?