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I chose ambidextrous, even though I'm primarily right-handed. I use the mouse exclusively left-handed, because all the keyboards have the number pad (and arrow keys)on the right side of the keyboard. By using the mouse left-handed, it frees up the right hand for speedy number entry. I learned this years ago, when I was still a mechanical design engineer and had to design in CAD all day. It turned out to be much more efficient once my left hand got the hang of the mouse thingy. Now, if I have to use the mouse right-handed, I struggle a little bit.
Though I still use a tablet right-handed.
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Me too, but for another reason.
When you sit in front of the keyboard you normally have the space key right in front of you. With the numeric keypad on the right side, the keyboard takes up more space to your right than your left so if the mouse is on the right side of the keyboard your right arm has to be more angled out from your body than the left arm if the mouse is used with the left hand on the left side of the keyboard.
A couple of years ago I got a "tennis elbow" (or rather "mouse elbow") which forced me to either go on sick leave a couple of weeks or try to use the mouse with the left hand instead. After a little struggling with the left and right mouse clicks, I found that it worked best if the keys where reversed (so the left click is always done with the index finger, which is the right button when using the left hand). Then it took surprisingly little practice to get up to speed and since then I have always used the mouse with the left hand when I am at work (which is where I use a computer the most) and have never felt any discomfort in my left arm at all. At home I still use the mouse on the right side and if I sit there for a while it doesn't take to loong before I get that stinging feeling in my right arm again.
/Ruben
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It would be interesting to cross-reference these statistics with language and technology preferences. For example:
- VB.NET vs C#
- Winforms vs Webforms
- Inline query vs stored procedure
Or maybe not. We don't want to start a war.
Michael L Perry
http://adventuresinsoftware.com
http://updatecontrols.net
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Michael L Perry wrote: It would be interesting to cross-reference these statistics with language and technology preferences.
Yeah, I need to update my profile:
Originally right handed C++ developer, now writes C#/VB .NET code with both hands, holding tea cup with left hand, right foot is reserved for but-kicking only.
modified on Tuesday, January 08, 2008 11:47:11 AM
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Do you feel more at ease using your right foot or left foot?
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Actually, a physician once told me that this question is much more suitable to understand if a person is left handed or right handed. Hands get easily conditioned in schools, while nobody cares about the feet. Since I used more my left foot (while playing soccer, for example) he told me I was left handed and probably corrected early in school.
Luca
The Price of Freedom is Eternal Vigilance. -- Wing Commander IV
En Það Besta Sem Guð Hefur Skapað, Er Nýr Dagur.
(But the best thing God has created, is a New Day.)
-- Sigur Ròs - Viðrar vel til loftárása
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This is interesting in that I (as mentioned in another post) am pre-dominantly right handed. When it comes to the feet however, I found that I have more strength when kicking (karate/tae-kwon-do/kick boxing) with my left leg than with my right leg. The only exception to this is jump kicks because I find it more comfortable to jump off my left leg.
My sensei always told me to train my right leg more than my left and never wanted to see me use my left leg in training so my right leg is almost as good. Looking at the kicks, one cannot tell the difference, but those I kicked always complained more with the left leg.
For things like soccer, rugby etc. I was never good at controlling round objects. I was a goal-keeper for that reason. I hardly missed the ball with my feet but could not direct it.
Let's make things simpler than possible.
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I was left handed until I went to school, where the idiot teachers forced left-handed children to write with their right hand.
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You had a lucky escape from inky left hand hell then. Writing left handed is the most sure fire way to get fresh ink on your writing hand, even with biros.
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... unless you don't write in reverse order (!)
Big Leonardo da Vinci!
2 bugs found.
> recompile ...
65534 bugs found.
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There is also a belief that left handed persons might have a more dominant control from right part of the brain and vice-versa. Somewhere have read but not sure of the authenticity or it might just be another hearsay.
Any clues?
Vasudevan Deepak Kumar
Personal Homepage Tech Gossips
A pessimist sees only the dark side of the clouds, and mopes; a philosopher sees both sides, and shrugs; an optimist doesn't see the clouds at all - he's walking on them. --Leonard Louis Levinson
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Vasudevan Deepak K wrote: Any clues?
If the left half of the brain controls the right hand and vice versa, then only left-handed people are in their right mind.
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but 2 exceptions for me: my mouse is at the right of the keyboard, and I play guitar as a right-handed person...
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Same for me : mouse, guitar and drums as right-handed, but write as left-handed person
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Well... i'm extremely left handed, and recently accostummed myself to use the mouse at left side of keyboard... I handle mouse with both hands, and guitar with both sides (dominant at the left) but I write only with left hand
Bye
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Well, you could try moving the mouse in the right hand side
Wamuti: Any man can be an island, but islands to need water around them!
Edmund Burke: No one could make a greater mistake than he who did nothing because he could do only a little.
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toxcct wrote: and I play guitar as a right-handed person...
I've done that too while tinkering around with one and it seemed ok. I bet you could play a left-handed guitar though if you really wanted to. I wouldn't laugh if you did... too much.
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lol, I'm right handed and normally I take my fork with my left hand, and my knife with my right... except when I'm eating spaghetti. Fork - right hand, spoon - left hand. Yet when I'm eating soup eg. the spoon is in my right hand again.
now isn't that ackward
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hi
I m left handed at play,operating mobile, righted handed at eating,drinking,writing, mouse use..........It is a mix of left and right but I m a lefty
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If you create with the right hand and dispose with the left one, are you ambidextrous?
SkyWalker
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Heh... growing up, I had a friend I used to play tennis and table tennis with. He used his right arm for tennis and left arm for table tennis.
--
Time you enjoy wasting is not wasted time - Bertrand Russel
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Johann Gerell wrote: Heh... growing up, I had a friend I used to play tennis and table tennis with. He used his right arm for tennis and left arm for table tennis.
He played both at the same time! Holy smokes Batman!
regards,
Paul Watson
Ireland & South Africa
Andy Brummer wrote: Watson's law:
As an online discussion of cars grows longer, the probability of a comparison involving the Bugatti Veyron approaches one.
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Paul Watson wrote: He played both at the same time! Holy smokes Batman!
You should try playing Wii Tennis as both player 1 and 2 simulataneously. For some odd reason my left hand always wins yet I'm right handed.
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Colin Angus Mackay wrote: You should try playing Wii Tennis as both player 1 and 2 simulataneously. For some odd reason my left hand always wins yet I'm right handed.
That sound hilarious
regards,
Paul Watson
Ireland & South Africa
Fernando A. Gomez F. wrote: At least he achieved immortality for a few years.
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