BrainStuff Classics: Which Computer Keys Wear Out First? - podcast episode cover

BrainStuff Classics: Which Computer Keys Wear Out First?

Jul 26, 20204 min
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Episode description

As casual computer use shifts to touchscreens, the wear patterns on computer keyboards have evolved. Learn what keys now wear out first in this classic episode of BrainStuff

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Transcript

Speaker 1

Welcome to brain Stuff production of iHeart Radio. Hey brain Stuff. I'm Lauren Vogelbaum, and today's episode is another classic from our erstwhile host, Christian Sagar. As casual computer use has shifted from happening on laptops and desktops to touch screen devices, the patterns of wear on traditional cordy keyboards has shifted too, so which keys now were out first? Hey brain Stuff,

it's Christian Sager here. If you spend a lot of time using a computer, you have undoubtedly noticed that over time some of the letters on your keyboards start to disappear. That leads to the question which keys on a keyboard tend to wear out the fastest. Since keys wear out because of use, it's logical to assume that the keys that wear out the fastest are the ones we use

most heavily, So which ones are they? Back in the days before computers, when typewriters and type setting machines were used to put words on paper, that was a fairly easy question to answer. As a trade publication called The Inland Printer noted, back in it was widely accepted that the most used key on keyboards was the space bar, followed by the letter E. Some sources still adhere to

that convention. A Microsoft product marketing official told Business Insider in, for example, that the most used key was the space bar, followed by the E and then the backspace key. But if you really want the definitive answer, the source best equipped to give it might be someone who replaces computer keys for a living. Patrick Halcrow is owner and operator of Laptop dash keys dot com, which supplies keys and parts needed, along with repair instructions, to people who need

to fix their broken laptop keyboards. Halcrow explains in an email that these days, habits have changed. That's because a lot of people who were once casual computer users have switched to using smartphones and tablets with touch screens to write emails and check out social media and videos, and the people who still use laptops are mostly either workers or computer gamers. As Halcrow says, gamers mostly order replacements for the W, A, S, and D keys, as well

as the arrow keys. That's because these specific keys are used for player movement in RPG type games as well as vehicle control in driving type simulators. People who use desktop and laptop computers for work, in contrast, tend to replace the vowel keys A, E, I, O, and you, and the space bar and the arrow keys, which Halcrow said are the keys pressed most often when typing. According to Halcrow, people tend to replace key ease mostly because

of aesthetics. They don't like the look of a keyboard where some of the letters are worn off, and not because of wear and tear on the underlying mechanism. When there is actual damage, he says, it's not because of wear and tear, but rather it's accidental. Think of your pets knocking a laptop off a table or children breaking off the keys, and as is the case with all accidents,

breaking the actual key mechanism is more unpredictable. Today's episode was written by Patrick da Tider and produced by Dylan Fagan and Tyler Klang. For more on this and lots of their topics, is it how stuffworks dot com. Brain Stuff is production of iHeart Radio or more podcasts to my heart Radio, visit the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.

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