Interesting points about touch typing
zslane.
I touch type since I learned how to do it properly in primary school. I have relatively small hands (for a man), barely bigger (not always) than my girly friends' and wife's.
I type around 110 wpm, very often using blank keycaps. I do like all sorts of switches, linear, tactile, clicky. I would never be able to chose one switch for live.
I currently have my preferences (or rather favourites) like this:
Clicky: no doubts, buckling spring, I used to prefer model M (my previous model Fs didn't feel all that great), but it changed when I acquired a very nice AT Model F (feels amazing regardless of all the rust on springs - I still can't believe it). This switch was designed as tactile, clicky one from the grounds up and you can feel and hear it. There is no cheating or tricking like in Alps / Cherry (or clones).
Tactile: definitely Topre, rubber domes provide nice native tactility, and keyboards are overall very nicely done, apart from swapping space bar they don't require any mods to be excellent.
Linear: the most tricky one since I do like linear space invaders the most, but I can't use them daily, simply because of lack of keycaps to build a keyboard in a layout I want (HHKB of course). The closest I can get to them using what is available is to me Vintage MX Black with lubed 62G springs and cherry profile thick PBT keycaps. That's the strength of Cherry, you can make it truly yours in a keyboard that is customised exactly to your liking.
This has very little to do with the topic of this thread however, but I just want to show that I'm not a Cherry fan boy by saying MX is underrated. Outside this forum it's not, but here, it definitely is very underrated switch. It really has its strengths. Good luck building beam spring or topre ErgoDox