Goodness yes. I favour my rant on the topic in the Procedural Knowledge Gaps post a couple of years ago.
I see you already have people replying that they are special snowflakes who don't need this despite spending their lives attached to a computer. They are wrong.
I would say QWERTY is still a vast improvement over not bothering at all, and setting one's keymap to Dvorak and remembering that the letters on one's keyboard are lies would count as a trivial inconvenience, which is why I didn't mention it. (And I'm still on QWERTY myself.)
It seems like your comment applies to me, so I hope you won't mind if I interrogate you a bit. I just read the linked rant, and I see that you offer no citations or justifications for your claims. You talk about complaints of sore fingers; I have no such complaints. I don't have RSI problems despite over a decade of work in the computer industry (paying attention to basic ergonomics helps).
So I am really curious (and please don't take my question as hostile, it's not meant to be): you make such strong, heartfelt claims that it's absolutely necessary to tou...
Thus spake Eliezer:
It seems that many here might have outlandish ideas for ways of improving our lives. For instance, a recent post advocated installing really bright lights as a way to boost alertness and productivity. We should not adopt such hacks into our dogma until we're pretty sure they work; however, one way of knowing whether a crazy idea works is to try implementing it, and you may have more ideas than you're planning to implement.
So: please post all such lifehack ideas! Even if you haven't tried them, even if they seem unlikely to work. Post them separately, unless some other way would be more appropriate. If you've tried some idea and it hasn't worked, it would be useful to post that too.