Comments
GaimanitePkat t1_izjv2ic wrote
"How did you learn to type so fast?"
"Well you see I get really angry at people on Reddit...."
^(actually i've always been a fast typist but my reddit argument typing is lightning speed)
GDogg007 t1_izky7o9 wrote
The average Reddit user has nothing on MMORPG and FPS players of old. Back when you had to type a sentence blazing fast so you could get back to the hot keys. Often leading to misspellings and many times hotkeys being sent in chat.
SgtPooki t1_izlsth5 wrote
I originally learned how to type and program on MUDs.
GDogg007 t1_izoflai wrote
MUDs were before we had high enough speed internet that the typing could keep up. I remember typing out stuff and waiting as it slowly showed up on the screen. Memories. LOL
GucciGuano t1_izmef10 wrote
flash2:wave2:selling laws 1k ea
kandaq t1_izmk2ko wrote
I once saw someone wrote âI f*ck my momâ followed by â*yourâ.
FistofKroma t1_iznxuuc wrote
This is the way.
elsjpq t1_izkh2w1 wrote
A little motivation always helps
the_last_lebowski t1_izkjapn wrote
Gotta get those retorts in quick.
gunfart t1_izk8tw1 wrote
i laughed at this way harder than i should have
FistofKroma t1_iznxsu9 wrote
This is how I learned in 2000? Except instead of reddit it was Diablo 2 and Everquest chat.
Also forums like flame4cash and ShinraOnline.
Bikebag t1_izm3e65 wrote
Nah its about effectiveness, typing fast will make you do a typo which they'll use to disregard your whole argument with a strawman.
[deleted] t1_iznxyvu wrote
[deleted]
betterball t1_izjz67n wrote
runescape was the main typing training for me growing up haha
as a hyperactive kid, i needed to be able to type as fast as i talked irl đ
Doug_Dimmadab t1_izlqp0h wrote
Same, but mine was Minecraft public servers (usually Hypixel)
Sawses t1_izmpbvw wrote
I used to do Minecraft roleplaying back in the day. I just typed out a page of Call of Cthulu and apparently my typing speed is around 110 WPM still. When really trying, I can get it to around 120.
Forzix t1_izm90x8 wrote
Ohhh yes, OSRS back in the day taught me my 3-total-fingers typing method of immense speed. I call it the speed-pecker technique.
I really wish I typed normally lmao, but 70-80wpm is functional enough to write code and chat people, so oh well.
Fixes_Computers t1_izks561 wrote
This is basically the method I used.
I took two years of typing between the 8th and 10th grades. I got up to about 45 wpm.
After moving out on my own, I started calling BBSs (bulletin board systems). These were much more common in the 80s and 90s before the internet took off.
I would spend way too much of my leisure time typing messages on them.
My current typing speed is over 70 wpm. What I find odd is I don't consider my speed all that fast, but I'm way ahead of most people I know. I have one coworker who is faster. Most job descriptions I've seen require 40+. I wouldn't think that a stretch, but too many people can't type. (Side note, the keyboard I had at worked sucked so I bought my own, replaced the key switches with something stiffer, and replaced most of the caps with blanks because I'm a touch typist and a jerk.)
I find Reddit very familiar compared to the BBSs I used to call. I'll probably stay here until it or I am gone.
blindsight t1_izl4i46 wrote
40+ with 97% accuracy is basic competency. Should be enough for most jobs.
70+ with 98% accuracy is proficient. It's a good target for any work that requires significant communication by email or report writing.
100+ with 99% accuracy is an attainable target with intentional practice. It's a good target for taking minutes and other jobs that require typing "live".
Fixes_Computers t1_izl56j1 wrote
If I had to type live on a regular basis, I think I'd learn how to use a court reporting machine. Mind you, that only works if I get to transcribe later.
blindsight t1_izl82ym wrote
Yeah, stenography is a whole other thing.
I can type ~95 WPM with high accuracy when I'm focusing; this is enough that I'm able to keep up with the main ideas that need to be recorded in meeting minutes (and similar reporting/tracking documents), but definitely not word-for-word transcription.
To keep up with spoken language, you either need to learn stenography or slow down an audio recording. Or limit people to talk more slowly, lol.
Fixes_Computers t1_izlpx1b wrote
I'd be happy with a dictation machine and a foot pedal.
I used to have a client who did at home dictation on her computer. Apparently there are no good food pedals. The ones out there are expensive and poorly made.
blay12 t1_izme8r0 wrote
As a very proficient typist (generally around 130-140 wpm with 98% accuracy, can blast past that if I'm focused in short stretches) that also works in video and has to do a LOT of transcription to caption my work if it's not pre-scripted (most of my work is for the government, so accessibility is required), I've been flirting with the idea of picking up a steno keyboard (or setting up one of my existing keyboards since I can just map it with software) and trying to learn that, especially since I've been doing a lot of live transcription and note-taking in our dnd campaigns. I can generally keep up with slow speakers on a normal keyboard, but fast conversation between 6 people eludes me sometimes if I'm trying to capture actual quotes.
Tbh the DnD is strangely driving me to learn it more than work is, since AI transcription has taken some INSANE jumps recently - with recent updates, I can now have my editing software transcribe a conversation between 3 people (that are well mic'd and assuming none of them have insane accents) and get the result with 99% accuracy, divided by person speaking (e.g. the software recognizes that there are 3 distinct people speaking and sets up the transcription as such, like "Person 1: bla bla", "Person 2: Oh of course blah blah") along with actual grammar/capitalization/etc in a matter of minutes, so all of a sudden I've just been randomly freed of a bunch of onerous busy work, which I don't hate.
For some reason it just seems super cool to me to be able to take down word for word notes as someone's speaking, which is weird, but something that would be fun to follow up on.
[deleted] t1_izmc5lk wrote
[deleted]
Practical_Cartoonist t1_izme7d4 wrote
I started learning the Dvorak keyboard layout in the mid 90s, when IRC was at its peak, and I found IRC indispensable in learning how to type quickly. The big channels moved fast in those days, so if you couldn't get a response typed out in a few seconds, the conversation would have already moved on.
I remember distinctly that 'h' and 'a' were the first 2 letters I learned in Dvorak just because I could get in a 'haha' lightning fast on IRC. (Well 'a' in Dvorak is easy to learn anyway, since it's in the same spot as in QWERTY)
[deleted] t1_izmgdqi wrote
[deleted]
Si_more_nalgas t1_izkuwww wrote
No you cant
TommyTuttle t1_izl0u9y wrote
Yes you can. But an argument isn't just contradiction. An argument is a connected series of statements intended to establish a proposition.
Si_more_nalgas t1_izl1zzt wrote
wrong
dr_snrub t1_izlb92q wrote
No it isn't!
TommyTuttle t1_izlc2bi wrote
Yes it is.
rrsafety t1_izldrxv wrote
The quick brown fox is a Fascist and so are you you pathetic piece of worthless racist trashâŚ.
TommyTuttle t1_izlp1wp wrote
Projection at its finest. Nobody mentioned race until you brought it up, you divisive communist shit. The quick brown fox is the only one who can save our country! Why do you hate our freedom?
NaoPb t1_izlxgjy wrote
What are you calling me perfect for then?
TommyTuttle t1_izlymh2 wrote
Because you are. You are complete, and whole, and perfect. And you donât even realize it. And that, is perfect.
[deleted] t1_izkgeqq wrote
[deleted]
speedshifter2015 t1_izkzbhz wrote
I'd rather get into perfect arguments with stupid strangers. đ
Publius82 t1_izl5y4l wrote
That is the worst idea I've ever heard! /s
FearGunner t1_izm4xkx wrote
Or playing Typing of the Dead, which is great fun.
[deleted] t1_izmpcvf wrote
[deleted]
[deleted] t1_izmqsry wrote
[deleted]
axolotl_afternoons t1_izo25dn wrote
Bronson Pinchot has entered the chat!
gazongagizmo t1_izkj4gv wrote
that is so typist of you!
MagicalEloquence OP t1_izi504z wrote
I have always loved typing. There was a time when I was fascinated by the idea of typing without looking at the keyboard. My typing speed used to be under 20 words per minutes.
​
I learnt how to type a decade ago and improving my typing speed is a passion of mine.
​
The book 'Grit' by Angela Duckworth talks about the importance of hobbies or learning an instrument as a child. Of persevering at something you are not actually good at to tell yourself that you can get better at something through hard work. I had not read the book as a child, but typing has come to represent that to me.
​
I practice typing whenever I get free time or want to relax and not think about tensions. Getting better at typing is a reminder to myself of being able to get better at something you were not by sheer hard work - A testament to my hard work.
​
I love the feeling of improving at something with sheer hard work.
​
However, a lot of typing websites are mere random words or passages that are a paragraph or two and then repeat ! This is a fantastic idea !
​
It's real text. It's literature so it even has a lot of words, which would not appear in everyday conversation. It teaches you new typing patterns and new memories for the muscles to build.
It's also very engaging for the mind and a very constructive website ! Thanks for making it !
BobMortimersButthole t1_izjrjr0 wrote
I learned touch-typing when I was 10 because my mom was trying to improve her typing speed for a job interview and picked up an audio tutorial, and I was bored over winter break. I realized quickly that I absolutely love typing!
Like you, I do typing games and practice for fun, as a way to decompress. It feels like a strange "hobby" to have, but now I can easily, and accurately, type 90 - 100 wpm and the skill has gotten me a lot of jobs over the years.
MagicalEloquence OP t1_izn7toq wrote
It's wonderful that you have progressed so far ! It's amazing the influence parents can have on children by osmosis ! I hope your mother was able to increase her typing speed!
acfox13 t1_izmon69 wrote
This is awesome!
I feel the same way about my yoga practice. I've been practicing for over a decade. When I first started, it took me six months of regular practice to balance on one leg. Today in class I was reminded that no matter how long I take between classes my yoga practice taught me to move more gracefully and intentionally through the world, both physically and psychologically.
And I love how this combines reading with leveling up a skill! Thank you!
MagicalEloquence OP t1_izn773s wrote
It's amazing to see you making progress ! Ultimately, our progress with our steadfast persistence is what really motivates us and makes us feel better !
gazongagizmo t1_izkjaws wrote
> The book 'Grit' by Angela Duckworth
hhhhm^m^m^m^m^m I wonder what her nickname was in school, university, and everywhere else
LooperComedy t1_izmgvxr wrote
Angie?
AitchyB t1_izibe9i wrote
When I learned touch typing in highschool many moons ago (on an electric typewriter lol) we were taught not to read the word (when copy typing) but instead break it down into letters to improve our speed, hence the practicing of random letter groups. So a site like this wouldnât actually be any good because I wouldnât take in the content.
snowe2010 t1_izjioow wrote
Thatâs pretty funny because I learned the exact opposite. You shouldnât have to read the letters because you can type much faster if you can read words faster, so the only thing that will ever slow you down is unknown words. And it has matched my experience. Reading far ahead while typing means you can type much much faster. I type like 80-90 words a minute with actual sentences vs like 50 for random letters.
colawars t1_izjk7bb wrote
I've been training myself to type better and you're right. Words become macros and can flow off your fingertips without you even knowing the movements you just made. I sometimes find myself regressing into my old typing behaviors where every letter seems to take a monumental effort to hit, but with practice I've been able to get back on track.
snowe2010 t1_izkc8xl wrote
Macros is a great way to put it. Thatâs exactly how I feel about it, they arenât individual letters anymore, theyâre a macro to put a word on screen and itâs just easier for your brain to process it that way.
60Hurts t1_izkwvon wrote
So easy! The trouble then is when at work you have to type a colleagueâs name ending in âshidâ and every single time you need to correct what your brain is accustomed to typing, and you live in fear of the day you slip up.
snowe2010 t1_izld1kz wrote
I think my brain must process that differently. If I have a word pop up that I donât have âprogrammedâ then I do default back to the character by character typing.
blay12 t1_izmfkzt wrote
Love the idea of "macros" for individual words, bc as a solid typist (130-140wpm) that's exactly what it feels like to me when I'm "in the zone" and really pushing. If you can read far enough ahead that you're seeing words and have a sense of the paragraph you're writing (or the paragraph you're trying to say if it's something original you're writing), words on a keyboard are kind of just collections of letters and easy to repeat sequences that you can hammer out within less than a second. It's kinda musical in a way, like you're swapping chords on a guitar or piano, and I envision chords on either instrument pretty much the exact same way - you're just throwing your hands into a default position without really thinking about the specific positions bc you know that this "form" of your hands makes this sound, so you don't have to think about how each finger on each string or key is making its own impact.
Obv this all comes with a lot of practice, and I've gotten a TON of practice typing from the nature of my work, but faster typing is absolutely attainable for anyone that can put in some time practicing.
mrmusclefoot t1_izl6kuj wrote
I took a note taking and speed reading class once and they teach you to use your finger to keep track of what word you are on and to speed through a paragraph ignore the basic words like pronouns or and and the cause your brain is seeing them but you donât need to focus consciously to pick them up.
MagicalEloquence OP t1_izihlqq wrote
That's quite cool. What is your typing speed now ?
Chipdermonk t1_izjsgbk wrote
It seems to me that typing by letter instead of word would be a great hindrance. I type around 130 wpm in English, but when the language changes, that goes down significantly. Mentally, my fingers type words like a pianist plays an arpeggio. You donât think of every letter, you think of groups of letters, just as the pianist doesnât think of the individual notes, they think of the entire chord.
[deleted] t1_izkhlq2 wrote
[deleted]
Chipdermonk t1_izl2ey3 wrote
Every once in awhile I use the fast fingers website, but I think my speed is influenced by my piano studies. I donât regularly practice typing, but I do it often as I write a lot. In my experience, I type full words, not the letters of those words (mentally, I mean). There are some words that I type very fast because they are ingrained in my finger memory, but if the word is new or less common, I type it slower.
rhaizee t1_izjz58d wrote
That's funny I do the opposite, I read a head and already know how to type it so I don't need to see the entire word, I string a lot a few words. I type casually at 80, more at 90-100 fast.
Fixes_Computers t1_izktacz wrote
I was initially taught letter by letter, but typing words was a natural evolution as proficiency increased. I think it was even discussed at some point when I first learned (it's been decades so my memory is understandably fuzzy).
Even now, typing on my phone with my thumbs, I'm typing words and not letters.
AitchyB t1_izl606d wrote
I think this is probably a more accurate description of the way I was taught, letters initially which is to learn the QWERTY keyboard layout and get it so you donât have to think about where each letter is, and then with practice you will sight the word and just type that at speed, but new words or those with unfamiliar spelling still get broken down to letters.
smittypeg81 t1_izjemxj wrote
Well there goes my work day....but all this typing makes it seem like I'm working on something really important.
Ackmiral_Adbar t1_izjjh6u wrote
Seems perfect for a Friday.
MyCleverNewName t1_izjs8uu wrote
Narananas t1_izlup98 wrote
Maybe the monkey was ahead of its time and meant blursed.
DAE_le_Cure t1_izkgyy3 wrote
Hunter S. Thompson honed his craft early on by doing this, I believe with the books The Great Gatsby and A Farewell to Arms. His rationale was that he wanted to know how it felt to write masterworks like that
nooneisback t1_izjxpsc wrote
Welp, I just figured out I have a serious problem. 3 times couldn't write dogs properly, instead typing out dongs...
Combatical t1_izjyju4 wrote
You like dags?
MiggyEvans t1_izmgtz1 wrote
I like caravans more.
ShouldBeeStudying t1_izjtws2 wrote
I wish I could set it to have two spaces after periods rather than one
KokopelliOnABike t1_izk0g1u wrote
2 spaces went the way of the dodo.
ShouldBeeStudying t1_izkayed wrote
I still have my keyboarding book telling us to do it that way. Haha, 40 years from now I will still show it to people. It's so much more fun to hit it twice!
stringdom t1_izkihog wrote
It's a really bad practice though. I mean, it was bad practice then, and it is worse practice now. Unless you are typing with a 1930's typewriter, and even then it was a subject of debate among typographers. European press hated it. Graphic designers have always been against it as well. It fucks up legibility, creates rivers, looks ugly and makes parsing text harder for computers. Essentially it's exclusively an US stubbornness thing. Just like people adding vertical space with newlines, it's a holdover from worse times.
ShouldBeeStudying t1_izkmiod wrote
Any reasonable person knows a lot of what you said is subjective.
iamobiwan t1_izlvm4l wrote
Itâs really not. Style guides exist for this reason. There are rules of grammar, style, and punctuation.
https://www.thesaurus.com/e/writing/is-there-1-space-or-2-after-a-period/ âAccording to every major style guide youâll find, the rule is a single space after a period or any other punctuation mark you use to end a sentence. Even the APA, the staunchest defender of the double space over the decades, changed their stance on the issue in 2019.â
You can just ignore their advice : just like you can use the wrong punctuation and Capitalization whEnever you wantââ
But that doesnât mean itâs subjective. Thatâs like saying having 2 periods at the end of each sentence is subjective. It really isnât.
ShouldBeeStudying t1_izlwujm wrote
Whether an authority says X or not doesn't mean it looks ugly. And legibility for one person is different than for other people. I've delt with parse texing the difference on computers and it's not ba.... nevermind. This discussion has been done and it's not what I'm here for
stringdom t1_izknzf1 wrote
Yes, but is it unreasonable or illogical?
ShouldBeeStudying t1_izksg3r wrote
No. Just not objectively true and it doesn't doesn't settle anything. Folks have had this conversation way better than anyone on here will be able to do, and we've probably read them ourselves already anyway. So it would be nice if this website accommodate both methods
stringdom t1_izkts99 wrote
> Just not objectively true
Nothing is. You do you, if you are the only one seeing your text and want to have fun double spacing, go ahead. Knock yourself out, break that space bar. But as soon as you are writing for publishing or for others you'll have your text immediately manhandled, criticized and corrected. And it will all be with those same subjective opinions that are going to determine the validity and worth of your writing. I've seen editors throw away pitches because of the double space thing, âIt is in the guidelines, if they won't read and respect the submission guidelines then they are not worth my time.â
ShouldBeeStudying t1_izkvx1v wrote
I've seen it go the other way in a professional setting. One place I worked you couldn't put documents out to clients with single. One of the jr. analysts even redid templates once for the single method and the senior management squashed it. This was 5 years ago. A couple others, people put things out both ways.
.
I believe you though.
stringdom t1_izl9g9d wrote
Exactly my point. Subjective opinions shape the material world. Subjectivity is the source of reality.
ShouldBeeStudying t1_izlh0ew wrote
Yeah man. Some people like it. Some don't. So it's a shame this otherwise fantastic tool shuts that out.
ShouldBeeStudying t1_izlml33 wrote
^^ Haha, someone doesn't like my experience
tallon80 t1_izkntuu wrote
YES! I KEPT GETTING ERRORS BECAUSE OF THAT!
Fixes_Computers t1_izksr47 wrote
Several years ago, I was able to retrain this out of me. I'm not sad.
Most modern word processors will automatically adjust kerning to what's appropriate after punctuation. It really became unnecessary.
jrev8 t1_izkusgy wrote
Whoever types and reads count of monte cristo or les mis is a brave soul
ecp001 t1_izk9zwg wrote
It seems to me that the process of typing, rapidly reproducing words as your looking at them, is not conducive to understanding the text and absorbing the underlying message or even the story.
blindsight t1_izl5oqy wrote
I found the opposite. The process of focusing on every word helped increase my reading comprehension.
Maybe it depends on your reading and typing speed? idk
Forzix t1_izmaiob wrote
Definitely depends on the person. I'm the same way as the top commenter, I will process next to nothing of the context of the sentence when typing for speed/technique. Then again I also have the problem of reading sentences and just generally not processing any of the meaning (especially when I have other thoughts in my head), leading to me having to reread stuff.
Same goes for reading, trying to intentionally read fast for practice/competition, none of the meaning makes it to my brain. Usually when I read a book I read it at somewhat of a narrating-out-loud pace, makes it feel more comfortable and like I'm watching a movie in my head.
blindsight t1_izmawoi wrote
I'm a speed demon when I'm reading fiction, so I wonder if that's part of it, too. I need to slow down dramatically to type it.
MerlinQ t1_izl61ma wrote
I don't know, I read far, far, faster than I type, and do fine with reading comprehension.
I also find the act of writing things helps me process them better.
So I kinda think this would be like combining the two.
Definitely going to give it a try, since the random word typing could never get me to hang in past a couple minutes before driving me nuts.
60Hurts t1_izkvjuj wrote
While at university I got a work/study grant typing for a professor who was doing a study of the evolution of English spelling and typography (or something like that) based on comparison of editions of King Lear across the centuries. I got an hourly rate and a set number of hours to work. I forget how many.
The first edition I typed was a rough go because most but not all s characters were a tall curly f-like character that wasnât on the keyboard and needed to be typed as $ every time. The play was great though.
I was halfway through a second edition with no odd characters to slow me down when my allotted hours were up. But I was so looking forward to that bit where Gloucester and Ed(gar?/mund?) were in a field but supposedly at the top of a cliff that blind Gloucester was going to pitch himself off, and all the other tragic events, that I just kept on going. The prof said âYou didnât have to finish it, you know.â Yeah, but I did.
It was in a dingy computer lab and the keyboard was all greasy and gross, but it was still the best job. So much fun.
ShouldBeeStudying t1_izk9n5c wrote
I tried out the settings and nothing seems to accommodate two spaces after a sentence. I'd be ok taking a hit to the accuracy if there was a setting that didn't blow everything up after that. But even ignoring punctuation or stopping after an error doesn't line up it right.
DylanHate t1_izljyt6 wrote
Adding two spaces after a sentence is a holdover from typewriting days. It isnât used anymore as modern fonts adjust for extra space between sentences.
Least_Cockroach8658 t1_izlfzoz wrote
This sounds cool. I only use monkey type or nitro type
bookwyrm5000 t1_izlr2a3 wrote
I've been doing this for a while now. I typed all of "Lupin, Gentleman Burgler"
It's a nice service.
NortWind t1_izmcb55 wrote
Try the Gutenberg project as a volunteer.
xXRoboMurphyxX t1_izmhyzy wrote
Check out the typing of the dead
[deleted] t1_izilyum wrote
[removed]
Bighorn21 t1_izjuvj9 wrote
This is pretty cool, they should do some kids books as well.
Danyn t1_izkdwj3 wrote
Back in the day, we played MMOs. If you couldn't type fast, in battle, you either died or couldn't communicate.
OGkateebee t1_izkeoag wrote
This could easily derail my whole life. I love typing. Limited myself to just one page. 68 wpm and 96% accuracy. Not too shabby. I think this would be really calming and meditative.
poisonayvee t1_izkfkeh wrote
Thank youâ¤ď¸
tastelessshark t1_izknlwa wrote
Ooh, I've been meaning to reread a Christmas Carol for the holidays anyway, and this sounds neat.
manchegoo t1_izkpz6y wrote
I around 85-90 wpm, but I think I could go faster if I stressed myself. Definitely easier on books that don't have a lot of dialog. The quotations, and paragraphs make for more technical typing. Perhaps you'd get used to it though. For example the beginning of Little Women was a bit slower for me than the beginning of 1984.
ZachMN t1_izl577h wrote
âIt was the best of times, it was the blurst of times.â
yatamorone t1_izldid0 wrote
You can also feel like the author of the world's classic masterpieces of literature.
yatamorone t1_izldnyz wrote
The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog, and into an adventure that would change everything he thought he knew about the world and himself.
DylanHate t1_izliwag wrote
I love the idea, but Iâm having a very hard time with legibility with the extra bold serif font.
Itâd be nice to have the ability to select a few different fonts. Georgia, Tisa, and Merriweather are considered very legible serif fonts.
Sans-serif is generally considered easier to read on a digital screen â Helvetica, Open Sans, Roboto, PT Sans, and Verdana are very good options.
It looks like youâre using Literata â but youâre relying on the font-weight property to generate the bold weight. These arenât âtrueâ weights, the browser artificially creates it. Also, not all browsers render âfont-weightâ equally, so for maximum legibility itâs best to use the exact weight of the original font.
Itâs like oblique v italic. Oblique will give you the slant, but itâs not a real italic. Font designerâs consider many different variables when crafting italic and bold styles, the arenât just slanted or relying on additional stroke for the heavier weights.
Lastly, I think it would be helpful if the font size was bigger. Because youâre focusing on each letter / word, after awhile it starts blurring together.
But overall itâs a fantastic concept, and you have a great selection of titles as well. Very cool.
EDIT: Regarding fonts, the most legible ones are the ones that have equal character weight. You'll notice with Literata the bars "horizontal line in e, A, f, t, etc" are very thin while the stems & shoulders are quite thick. A famous example of this concept pushed to the extreme is the font Didot, which is featured on the cover of Vogue magazine.
These make for beautiful heading fonts, but poor paragraph fonts as the wide variety in width reduces overall legibility. You probably noticed this with Literata at its regular font weight which is why you changed the font-weight to bold, but I would consider selecting a different font altogether.
Koffeekage t1_izlp7fu wrote
I like Typing of the dead.
tungvu256 t1_izlpne9 wrote
Genius!!! Thanks!
speedspectator t1_izlrysb wrote
As someone with adhd that always needs to be doing two things at once for my brain to not be bored, this is great. I always have to be doing something with my hands and I love reading.
Vanad1um3 t1_izluswr wrote
Cool site! Typed The War Of The Worlds there, improved my wpm from 40 to 50.
dariask899 t1_izlz6bx wrote
This is super cool if I werenât already burnt out on typing. Oh Lordy, war and peace!! Carpal tunnel and life lessons dual pack!
balls_deep_inyourmom t1_izm4k6y wrote
Typing for later
fusionsofwonder t1_izmr5va wrote
But I will never find out what happened with the brown fox and the lazy dog.
itsmywife t1_izmrxep wrote
I wont use this but its cool!
Outrager t1_izjp23b wrote
It seems like those ChatAIs would be really good for something like this just to get different texts.
the_kfcrispy t1_izlash2 wrote
Great practice for plagiarists!
TommyTuttle t1_izjhpjc wrote
You can also hang out on Reddit and learn to type by getting into stupid arguments with perfect strangers đââď¸