Or you could try a different website like problemwords.com or like typelit.io and try typing a book? Source: 11 months ago
Compare problemwords.com with zentype.app with keymash.io with typelit.io. Source: 11 months ago
There are sites like typelit.io that will let you type entire books. Source: 11 months ago
It can't tell the difference between me practicing on Klavaro, or problemwords.com or typelit.io or any other typing website. It's just typing words over and over again. Consider that the 100 most common words in the English language make up approximately 50% of all words that have ever been written and you start to understand what I mean by repetition. Source: 12 months ago
Type racer and https://typelit.io/ were the ones I used with both groups. Source: 12 months ago
The only job I interviewed for which had a WPM requirement, also made me test for it. Their test was paragraphs and story-like. So it had punctuation and capitals…minimal numbers. It was a five minute test; I assume to get a good feel after everyone’s initial adrenaline-filled start. I like typelit.io for practicing long sessions. Source: 12 months ago
If you're using the Qwerty layout (as most people are) then you will use the exact same muscle memory to type the understand on monkeytype.com as you would on play.typeracer.com as you would on problemwords.com or typelit.io. Source: about 1 year ago
Having said all that, I am sticking with it and all I can recommend is more practice. Even just incorporating 10 minutes a day of keybr.com or typelit.io would probably help a lot. Source: over 1 year ago
Try a different website that you are not used to, for example, typelit.io or anything you are not familiar with, and work on accuracy for a week, I do that whenever I encounter a bottleneck. Source: over 1 year ago
Endurance challenge - 15 minute test of a book passage. (like typelit.io in concept). Source: over 1 year ago
You may have already got to the level where you want to do something like Monday and Tuesday on English 1k, Wednesday and Thursday on English 5k, Friday on English 1k, Saturday on English 5k and then Sunday on problemwords.com or typelit.io. Source: over 1 year ago
In terms of typing fatigue, the best option with QWERTY is nailing down your form - especially how you hold your body/wrists. Tiny adjustments can take a QWERTY form from tight and awkward to loose and comfortable in no time. When done right, you can get really excellent endurance. Most of my trained students type comfortably for an hour or so a day (not strictly necessary - as 15 to 20 minutes is usually enough,... Source: over 1 year ago
Typelit.io and problemwords.com are great sites to use as well. Source: over 1 year ago
Type slower. Accuracy is more important because you learn by doing right. And making errors, noticing them, and fixing them really eats your speed at below 97%. Make a deliberate effort to type something right. For example, try to type a chapter of a book in 98% in typelit.io. Or you can put settings in monkeytype where every error stops the run. Source: over 1 year ago
Does anybody know what font typelit.io uses in the stories? Source: almost 2 years ago
Also broke a quarter of a million words and five complete books on typelit.io. Source: almost 2 years ago
I would love to type these books both for typing practice and finally getting around to reading them. The problem is that I find the typelit.io ui to be not that good and would like to have it my way instead. Source: almost 2 years ago
Yes, for comfort, if you will type a lot. 100 wpm with two fingers is probably quite a stressful thing where as with 8 fingers it looks very relaxed. To cope with two fingers, you probably move your hands and wrists a lot. For an extended time that is not good. I doubt you can keep that speed for a long time. You can try typelit.io and try to type a short book like the art of war. You will most likely see that... Source: almost 2 years ago
Thereafter it is just learning by using. I rotate typelit.io for longer typing sessions when I have time to build stamina, monkeytype.com for one minute short sessions to remind me to type faster, problemwords.com to challenge me with hard words and fix errors a few sets a day and typeracer.com because there are short texts so I get to have punctuations and capital letters in real-world cases unlike with... Source: almost 2 years ago
Day 4: Endurance training - Type 10 pages of any book on typelit.io. Source: about 2 years ago
That is a big leap in a short time with your already high speeds. 150wpm consistently sounds a bit fishy. I think that the best way to learn is practising with a long text (typelit.io for example) aiming to high accuracy, doing speedy things (typeracer, monkeytype) a few times a day. Source: about 2 years ago
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