scottc wrote: ↑Well matt3o did mention the possibility of an all-row3 setup, which would suit Dvorak well.
All row 3 would be a good start, at least as good as the all-the-same keys on cheap rubber domes (where I don't feel the key profiles are the real problem). Row 4 would be nice for angled keyboards though, simulating the slanted stems design. The direction of the movement will always be subtly different, but this is not something a mere replacement of keys can hope to address.
I also like to try small tweaks to a layout, like incorporating the Colemak "CapsLock is now Backspace" idea into any layout (never got used to it, though it's a perfectly valid idea), and am currently trying a tweak to Dvorak to eliminate one of its primary annoyances: I'm swapping L and -. In stock ANSI Dvorak, the only letter in the entire alphabet that requires me to lift my hand is L. As a consequence, I type S or R a lot instead. I don't really have a problem with lifting for ' in the other hand, so I don't see lifting for - as a huge problem either. I guess punctuation has a slightly different mindset to it.
The real problem with the stretch to L has been that it probably has been the single biggest factor preventing me from being able to truly touch-type. The lift gets me out of position, and next thing I know, I'm typing absolute garbage. I'm constantly glancing down for safety on certain letter combinations.
(I know, I know, Colemak. But this seems like a much simpler remedy.)
OT, I know, but you can see why I want a row-agnostic key set.