yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

You Don't Type Alone.


3m read
·Nov 10, 2024

Hey, Vsauce. Michael here. And thank you for clicking on this video. But how many times a day do you click? And how many times a day do you type keys on a keyboard? You might be surprised by the answer. And one of the best ways to know exactly how many actions you're taking per day is to use software like WhatPulse. WhatPulse measures how often you do things: keystrokes, mouse clicks. It even measures the total distance you've moved your cursor.

It's really fun stuff to track and, of course, depending on who you are, or what day it is, or what you do, your totals per day will change. But it's been found that, on average, people who use computers a lot, like office workers, type around 5,000 to 10,000 keystrokes every day. And they click a mouse about 1,500 to 3,000 times a day. Interestingly, computer users in the UK typed the most.

Sitting down and using a computer - typing, scrolling, moving the mouse - burns about 20 more calories an hour than just doing nothing. I mean, if you do nothing, you're still using calories. It takes energy for you to exist. You have to keep your body temperature where it should be, you have to breathe, pump blood. To figure out how many calories it takes, per day, for you to just exist, simply take your weight in pounds and multiply it by 11. If you want to be more specific, take your weight in kilograms and multiply it by .02.

What you wind up with is the number of calories it takes, per minute, to keep you existing. That's the number of calories that you burn every minute doing nothing. It's not very much. And using a computer doesn't raise it that much higher, but don't be discouraged, because typing and texting can bind us together.

We text and type on keyboards a lot. And rapidly. In fact, every day, 6 billion text messages are sent. And there are only 7 billion people on Earth. And that's just texting. We'll add keyboard typing in a little bit later. But I want to take a quick detour and talk about the letters, and the characters, and the keys themselves. They're not all pressed the same number of times. Some are more common than others.

Let's begin visually. This is a sculpture of a keyboard, where every letter has been raised to a height that corresponds to its popularity compared to the other letters. The letter "E" is the most common letter typed in almost every language that has a letter "E." But to figure out letter frequencies in texts that you type yourself, use Patrick Wied's heat map.

On this site, you can type a sentence in and see how frequently the characters are used. For instance, this sentence contains every letter in the alphabet at least once, but it uses "E" and "O" the most. Roughly speaking, and considering different languages, of all the characters typed, or tapped on a phone every day, about 9% of them are the letter "E," which is a lot, but the letter "E" is not the most common key. The space bar is the most commonly pressed key - nearly twice as popular as the letter "E."

Now that we know about the space bar's popularity, let's return to texting and add in keyboard typing. If we assume that about 350 million people are typing 5-10,000 characters a day on keyboards, and add that to the number of characters being texted every day, we can do a little bit of math and determine that at any given second, here, on Earth, the space bar is being pressed 6 million times.

6 million space bars a second! What a great world, right? Well, let's think of it this way. Because it only takes 1/10th of a second to tap, or type, a space bar, when you push the space bar, statistically speaking, as many as 600,000 other people on Earth did that at the exact same time that you did. So, if you ever feel alone, just give yourself some space and know that more than half a million people are doing that exact same thing.

And as always, thanks for watching.

More Articles

View All
Factor markets worked example | Microeconomics | Khan Academy
We’re told that Epic Eats is a perfectly competitive profit-maximizing producer of stuffed sandwiches and hires workers in a perfectly competitive labor market. Part A says draw side-by-side graphs for the labor market and for Epic Eats and show each of …
Biosecurity Nightmare | To Catch a Smuggler: South Pacific | National Geographic
Auckland International Airport welcomes over 350,000 visitors from the USA every year. Many bring dreams of a wonderful holiday, but this woman has brought a biosecurity nightmare. “I’ve just seen the most incredible thing, a cat.” And the lady says, “It…
Populations, communities, and ecosystems | Middle school biology | Khan Academy
In biology, it’s useful to have some shared language so we can communicate and describe the world around us in ways that we can all understand together. So here, we’re going to talk about populations, communities, and ecosystems, and as we’ll see, these …
TikTok Is More Dangerous Than We Thought
Tick Tock is far more dangerous than we thought. In the past two years, at least 15 kids age 12 or younger, across the globe, from Milwaukee to Sicily, have painfully passed on after attempting what seemed to them like harmless challenges they found on th…
Vietnam POW Escape | No Man Left Behind
I certainly remember the day I got shot down: the 6th of June, 1964. The ocean government had requested a show of support from the United States. We were tasked to go in and fly some missions over there as a kind of a show of force. The last pass, the la…
Worked example: Calculating the mass of a substance in a mixture | AP Chemistry | Khan Academy
We’re told that a 0.450 gram potassium supplement contains 22 percent potassium by mass. The potassium is present in the supplement as potassium chloride, which has a molar mass of 74.55 grams per mole. How many grams of potassium chloride are in the pota…