| > Using a trackpad gesture is just as quick. > Definitely not Sounds like a you problem. > easier. > It's harder [...] Sounds like a you problem. > [...] because you have to memorise more gestures and perform more complicated ones. Oh no, how will I ever remember (checks notes) swiping. On a Trackpad!? Insane. > More spatially natural > That makes no sense. I swipe left, window goes left. I swipe right, window goes right. I swipe up, window goes up. I swipe down, windows goes down. It's as close to actually flicking the windows around the space provided without getting a touch screen. > and only uses one hand We agree. > unless, of course, your other hand is always near a corner Corner of what? > you don't need to type to have your left hand rest [...] Big assumption that I'm left-handed. The modifiers on the right-hand side of some keyboards, including on notebooks, are seriously iffy. > [...] rest near the left near corner of the keyboard If my other arm isn't anywhere close to the computer, then it's nowhere near the keyboard, let alone the corner. > you've just moved your RSI to your right hand How often am I swiping windows? Barely. Are you also saying any use of the trackpad or mouse, no matter how little, is automatically RSI? Whereas having your fingers nearly-permanently at the ready over (or near the corner of) the keyboard is A-OK? > Also hands have the same length, so leaning back doesn't prevent leaving one finger on a modifier Back to the RSI angle because my hands are not glued to the keyboard. The way you seem to think so tells me you only sit at a desktop when using a computer, you never slouch, you never slump, you never use a notebook computer. > it's just that none of your arguments support it. Or your imagination cannot allow it. |