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1,035
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • The copy/paste ctrl-c and ctrl-v keyboard shortcuts are also a lot less convenient but I just deal with it.

    Thankfully, these were only shifted one to the right in Workman.


    It’s also annoying having to rebind keys in pretty much every keyboard-heavy game.

    Yeah I've gotten used to that. I sometimes will do a software switch in the OS back to QWERTY if I'm playing games (my layout is determined by the OS setting rather than hardware) so that I don't have to rebind, but it doesn't always seem to work. At the very least, I don't think you can do a layout switch while the game is running. Some games also appear to intercept raw keyboard codes rather than what's being sent by the OS so they ignore the software keyboard layout anyways.

  • Your requirements are pretty strict

    Ha, I honestly thought I was being pretty lenient with just requiring what I thought were, more or less, the base requirements for a pill tracking app.


    Didn’t get the encryption point

    If I understand you correctly that you mean that you don't understand the point of encrypting the data, the reason why I want that is to protect unauthorized access to the data if the device becomes compromised.


    MedTimer

    I've been using this one for a bit, and it does the job pretty well. It definitely is lacking polish and is somewhat buggy, but it's certainly usable.


    MediTrak

    I found this one's UI was rather cumbersome. I would choose MedTimer over it.


    Home MedKit

    I hadn't heard of this one! It looks well made. It's a shame one cannot input entries on any day though. I'm a little wary of a Russian app whose development history I cannot read, especially given that it's such a small app in terms of popularity, but it seems genuine. The development cadence is perhaps a little lacking.

  • Interesting idea to use a tasks app for taking pills (presumably with it set as a recurring task). I agree that the format is quite similar in how the data is input and read, but I think there's still some merit to having a dedicated app for this purpose. Things like data visualizations for dosages, and tracking missed dosages and alternate reminders for things like stock I think are better suited to an app that is dedicated.

  • they're selling their own "AI" bullshit

    Omg, they are. I had no idea that that existed. I'm not surprised at all, though — it seems AI is to businesses as podcasts are to middle aged dads 😜

  • Pet theory: most Dvorak users were, in their pre-enlightenment lives, messy freestyle 3-finger typists.

    Given that Dvorak tries to maximize alternating hands when typing consecutive characters [1], that theory definitely feels plausible given that the "hunt-and-peck" style for typing naturally seems to work with alternating hands. I think the same idea could also be applied to mobile typing as you only have two thumbs — perhaps Dvorak would lend itself well to mobile typing?


    If you ever went to the trouble of formally learning to touch-type Qwerty, moving to another layout just seems impossibly foreboding.

    It's not that bad. By my experience, having gone from QWERTY to Dvorak to Colemak to Workman, it takes maybe an hour to memorize the keys, then it's just a matter of practicing by using it. You will progressively get faster and faster as it becomes second nature. To get to full typing speed and for it to feel completely natural, however, it will likely take a month, depending on how often and how much one types.

    Something interesting that I noticed, though, is that it seems that the brain is only to be able to know one keyboard layout well at a time. If I learn a new layout, I don't maintain my skill with the previous layout minus the skill lost due to lack of practice. It almost feels entirely zero-sum. As I gain skill in one keyboard layout, I seem to equally lose skill in the previously known keyboard layout. I do try and maintain some level of proficiency with QWERTY, given that it is still the standard and is the most common, but it takes considerably more effort. It seems to be less acquiring a new skill and more rewiring the brain.

  • Under pros and cons

    Ah, okay! I didn't see that. Good to know.

    Quite funny that, assumedly, Windows prevents those things from being remapped. I personally love that the Capslock key got changed to the Backspace key. It's so much more comfortable.

  • I personally went from QWERTY to Dvorak to Colemak to Workman. I probably stayed on Colemak for the least amount of time. I've been on Workman for quite a number of years, now.

  • Hrm, it's only a survey. I think having information on people's opinion of a new/emerging technology is a good idea.

  • I’ve tried Dvorak and Workman but switched to Colemak-DH about a year ago

    What's your preference of the 3?

  • I’m not a fan of how accented vowels are achieved

    I personally use a compose key to accomplish accents.

  • Workman looks solid for English

    Yeah, afaik, Workman was specifically designed for English. The official website for Workman doesn't appear to specifically state that it was designed for only English, but there are a few small statements scattered throughout that hint at the theory that it was designed for English.

  • I feel like there is going to be a disproportionate amount of people not using a standard qwerty keyboard that replies to this :)

    Ha, likely true. There are certainly many biases at play here, but I'm still curious of the results regardless of them.

  • What do you mean? It's just a layout. How would it vary depending on the OS?

  • Total ripoff for the price

    If you don't mind, how much did it cost?

  • Imo, tbf, Matrix is really more of a replacement for Discord than a direct competitor to something like Signal.

  • I am unaware of any independent audit. That being said, it is opensource. Given that and its popularity, I am, personally, quite confident in its safety.

  • For what LocalSend is designed, imo, it is more convenient to use than scp — by quite a large margin.