About the same.
ITGuyLevi
Personal opinion, but it should show a single state and if it is active.
Where I live we usually put a batter in the waffle iron, doughs usually get shaped and put on a pan (or put into a loaf pan to make bread shaped bread). All that being said, I'm in the southern US, we aren't known for making sense most the time.
Clearly not a touch typist, then. The hands goes over the F and J (that's why the bumps are there on the keys, after all) and the fingers extend or fold to reach out to the other keys, but never move
If my fingers never moved, everything further right than the pipe would be out of reach. Not to mention the entirety of the number pad. I pay for 100+ keys, I'm using them damnit! Lol
On a lighter note, thanks for the engagement, even though we disagree its nice to hear someone's response!
If that is a defining quality of touch typists, I guess I'm far from one. My hand position moves all over the place as I type, but I haven't had to look for a key (or where my hand should go for whatever task) in a decade or so (I do have to look for a couple odd keys occasionally, only symbols I don't use frequently).
Just easier to crtl + a lot of keys with the same hand, then the hand slides right back to where it was (similar to how some people hit crtl + alt + del with one hand while others use two).
Scroll lock is still super useful for me, maybe they could just use the right control key.
My title has changed so many times, Sysadmin is so much easier and to the point.