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You Can Shatter The World Typing Record With This Wild Keyboard

CharaChorder is an odd-looking keyboard that essentially looks like a gamepad controller with a bunch of joystick-like switches that are claimed to let users type so outrageously fast that it has been banned from competitions. Now, the history of typing is quite fascinating, and it is one skill that every computer user aims to master in this day and age. But for a regular computer user, the global average typing speed is about 40 words per minute. The records, on the other hand, are much higher.

Stella Pajunas set a world record back in 1946 with a crackling pace of 216 words per minute on an IBM electronic typing machine that hasn't been replicated since. In 2005, Barbara Blackburn set a modern-day record with 212 words per minute. Typing competitions are quite a passionate affair, and one of the many online typing portals that maintain a leaderboard of keystroke warriors is MonkeyType. And yet, it has banned one particular yet extremely promising keyboard.

Related: How To Change Keyboard On Android And Best Ones To Try First

Say hello to the CharaChorder, a very weird-looking keyboard that appears as if someone modified a virtual reality headset controller and glued a bunch of joysticks to it. CharaChorder's website claims it can let users improve their typing speed by a margin of five times. In fact, its creator and the eponymous company's CEO, Riley Keen, recently shared a video where he can be seen hitting a staggering 377 words per minute on the MonkeyType test. That's over nine times as fast as the global average. And yet, he is not on the leaderboard, which currently has a champion at 277 words per minute. It appears that MonekyType automatically disqualified any typing score above the 300 words per minute mark. Moreover, a chat with one of MonketType's developers revealed that MonkeyType only allows traditional keyboards.

Instead of relying on a regular keyboard switch that only moves in one dimension, the switches on CharaChorder move like a joystick and recognize motion in all three dimensions. What this means is each half allows users to access over 300 unique inputs. It is touted to be more ergonomic and will enable users to type without ever having to lift their fingers. Each controller can be mapped individually to allow over 17 billion combinations, and it has been designed with ambidexterity in mind. No word on emoji addition, though.

CharaChorder claims the keyboard is excellent for typing, coding, and playing games as well. But the latter likely won't be accepted in an esports tournament, as there are strict rules regarding the kind of input devices. But the real exciting part is in the name itself — chords. The keyboard will let users type a word without following the specific order of letters. For example, hello can be typed as olleh, but the on-screen output will be hello. Plus, users don't have to type the letters one after another.

Users can click all the letter buttons at once, and the keyboard's patented internal processor will recognize and rearrange them in real-time to show the right word. CharaChorder says it wants users to type faster than the speed at which human eyes and mind can read and comprehend, something that falls in the range of 250 words. So instead, typing at the rate of thought says the company. The CharaChorder is currently out of stock on its website, but it is expected to return next month with a $250 price tag attached to it. Plus, it works across macOS, Windows, Android and iOS, and doesn't need any special software to do its magic.

Next: Call of Duty Streamers Go to War Over Keyboard & Mouse vs. Controller

Sources: CharaChorder, Riley and Richey Keen / TikTok



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