« Reply #16 on: Fri, 22 January 2010, 08:49:27 »
[Echoes of what Rajagra said about posture...]
Elevating the feet bring the back row keys you have to reach for just a little closer so that you don't have to reach as far, but how your body is situated in front of your keyboard is more important.
Most people probably have their keyboard on top of their desks and so in that case unless you're at least 6'2", then the keyboard is probably too high already.
Also, if you're slouching forward at your keyboard, the angle of your upper body makes it as if you're "typing uphill." That's something most people don't take into account. It doesn't matter if you have your workstation finely tuned to the perfect heights and distances only to negate everything with very bad posture once you get down to work.
If anyone has only one key to ergonomic success, don't listen to them. They don't know what they're talking about. It's how everything is put together that matters. Ergonomics is a very soft word and a controversial science... but you wouldn't ever know that from all the products that are getting marketed as "ergonomic."
« Last Edit: Fri, 22 January 2010, 10:22:45 by hyperlinked »

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