![]() ![]() ![]() Given the number of makeup, haircare, and skincare products that come across our desk, there's a handful that standout among the rest. It's a requirement of the job, albeit a very fun one. The votes are in: You'll want to clear a shelf for these 154 beauty game-changers.Īs beauty editors, we test a lot of products. Having the opposite hand type the middle letters while the other one is working is partly why I'm able to type 90 words a minute.For our 24th annual Best Beauty Buys, we surveyed leading dermatologists, makeup artists, hairstylists, and manicurists to find out which products they can't get enough of. I don't think I've ever used my left hand to type the letters from Right-Hand territory, though, and I'm left-handed too.\r\n\r\nSo I mostly type the B button with my left hand, unless that hand is already typing, then the right hand does the work. It would be slower to wait for the left hand to stop typing the previous word to continue the sentence, so my other hand picks up the slack. I think it's because while getting ready to type the B button and using my thumb to press the spacebar, I was busy using my left hand to type "the". I'll just come out and say I used the right hand to type the B button under the phrase "Using the right finger to type the B button". Using the right finger to type the B button is encroaching on the left territory, stretching the finger and making the typing process slower by a smidgeon.\r\n\r\nThat's how the rigid rules of typing are supposed to be anyway. The right finger gets J, U, M, Y, H, and N. \r\n\r\nTraditional ASDF starting position, the left finger has access to R, F, V, T, G, and B. ![]() I noticed that "B" has a pretty equal distance from both the left and right index fingers\r\n\r\nIt does? I find it's closer to the left finger because B is on the left side. ![]() Having the opposite hand type the middle letters while the other one is working is partly why I'm able to type 90 words a minute. So I mostly type the B button with my left hand, unless that hand is already typing, then the right hand does the work. I don't think I've ever used my left hand to type the letters from Right-Hand territory, though, and I'm left-handed too. That's how the rigid rules of typing are supposed to be anyway. Using the right finger to type the B button is encroaching on the left territory, stretching the finger and making the typing process slower by a smidgeon. Traditional ASDF starting position, the left finger has access to R, F, V, T, G, and B. It does? I find it's closer to the left finger because B is on the left side. I noticed that "B" has a pretty equal distance from both the left and right index fingers I never really thought about it.\r\n\r\nIt would be nice to have someone else say what they use for three reasons.\r\n\r\n1) I don't type properly, I'm self taught.\r\n2) I do things strangely.\r\n3) I'm ambidextrous, and don't have a dominant hand. In the b in because I used my right hand because my left hand was going to hit the e while my right hit the b. For example.that last capital b (and this latest one) I used my left hand because my right hand was going over to the period. It depends on the letter that will come after the B. It would be nice to have someone else say what they use for three reasons.ġ) I don't type properly, I'm self taught.ģ) I'm ambidextrous, and don't have a dominant hand. ![]()
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