¿Someone can send me a photo of a keyboard in English as the following one?
(I want to convert my program of typing al English)

Thank you





Ehehehe...zikitrake wrote:Psychophanta, akj very thanks by the answers. I believed that the UK and USA keyboard was the same one.
I will see what can I do


Psychophanta wrote:Nice coma! There are all.
In my opinion the US one is good. It should be the standard for all the world (countries with different alphabets should have the signs at the side of each letter). For example the Ñ can be done with pushing "~N", just like german Ü for example can be done pressing "¨U". So these keys are a surplus in a keyboard as it can be printed using dead keys.
http://www.independent.org/newsroom/article.asp?id=356The myth goes roughly as follows. The QWERTY design (patented by Christopher Sholes in 1868 and sold to Remington in 1873) aimed to solve a mechanical problem of early typewriters. When certain combinations of keys were struck quickly, the type bars often jammed. To avoid this, the QWERTY layout put the keys most likely to be hit in rapid succession on opposite sides. This made the keyboard slow, the story goes, but that was the idea. A different layout, which had been patented by August Dvorak in 1936, was shown to be much faster. Yet the Dvorak layout has never been widely adopted, even though (with electric typewriters and then PCs) the anti-jamming rationale for QWERTY has been defunct for years.