QWERTY - a podcast by BBC World Service

from 2019-04-15T01:00

:: ::

The QWERTY keyboard layout has stood the test of time, from the clattering of early typewriters to the virtual keyboard on the screen of any smart-phone. Myths abound as to why keys are laid out this way – and whether there are much better alternatives languishing in obscurity. Tim Harford explains how this is a debate about far more than touch-typing: whether the QWERTY keyboard prospers because it works, or as an immovable relic of a commercial scramble in the late 19th century, is a question that affects how we should deal with the huge digital companies that now dominate our online experiences.

Producer: Ben Crighton
Editor: Richard Vadon

(Image: qwerty keyboard, Credit: Getty Images)

Further episodes of 50 Things That Made the Modern Economy

Further podcasts by BBC World Service

Website of BBC World Service