Colemak
Provided by the ASK Keyboard Dictionary
Colemak is an alternative functional keyboard layout arrangement for Latin-script alphabet languages designed to address perceived comfort shortcoming with the QWERTY layout. It was created by Shai Coleman and released on 1st January 2006. Like the Dvorak layout, Colemak places the most frequently used letters of the English language on the keyboard's home row, but makes fewer changes to the rest of the keyboard's layout to make itself more 'approachable' to former QWERTY users. Compared to QWERTY, most symbol keys remain in the same position and common GUI-centric shortcuts remain the same since "A", "Z", "X", "C" and "V" have also not been moved. Colemak is supported on Android, ChromeOS, most major Linux distributions, macOS, and Windows 11 (since update 24H2).