
These involve typing words before something happens.įor more serious exercises, you can go to the third category, listed on the window's right side. Alternatively, you can opt for a game in order to make things more interesting. Difficult, studied or letters of your own choosing. You can also select what letters to be involved. These will make you type certain letters or whole words. Before starting, you can select between a keyboard or word drill. Here you can find a few easy exercises or games that will sharpen your typing. When you're done with the lessons, take a look under the Review category.

The program will tell you to press certain keys while holding your hands on the keyboard the way it taught you. Some chapters feature just text and images, explaining and illustrating things, like how to keep your fingers on the keyboard and so on. There are 12 lessons, each one with its own chapters.

These will explain everything about typing from, literally, "a" to "z". The first category you can access from the list is a set of courses. There's a number of ways you can use Typing Master to hone your skills. Its sections are all listed on the right side of the main window and their content will spread out on the main area once you click them. The interface is designed for easy access. It's roughly 4 Mb large and the installation process is fast and it won't hinder you with too many options. The package is easy to get and there's nothing to slow you down. A complex tutorial intended to help people type faster. The only criticism is the lack of a volume control for the odd time you may want to run another audio stream while doing your practice sessions.Don't you just hate it when you chat with someone online and he takes forever to type something? Here's a nice little Christmas present you can give him: Typing Master. I recommend the program but insist that you must exercise discipline to make it work for you. Discipline paid off and I can now touch type almost as fast as I could previously but with complete confidence that my new touch typing skills will soon have me typing much faster than with my old method.

I made steady progress by forbidding myself to not proceed to the next lesson till I had achieved 20 WPM with an accuracy of 95%. Finally, determination and a reduction in the need for high speed typing in the immediate future, I vowed I would resume and complete the lessons. Besides which, you could type faster that way! After two attempts and for expediency, reverting back to my old habits, I found myself dropping the practice sessions. I found TypeFaster tedious because it made the previously unused fingers ache and in the early stages, because the lessons had not imparted enough to actually use what you had learned for your everyday typing needs, you went back to your old method. After seeing a colleague touch typing at an incredible speed, I vowed I would teach myself to do the same.
