Temi Tech Hub

Temi Tech Hub

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Welcome to Temi Tech Hub, where we deal with tech education and digital content creation ๐Ÿ”๐Ÿ“ก๐Ÿค–
Here, we decode AI, secure your digital life, and teach Python like itโ€™s a superpower. Ready to become tech fluent? Letโ€™s build together.
#LearnAI #ContentCreation #Networking #CyberSecurity #AI #Python #TechEducation #LearnToCode #FutureReady

18/01/2026

How I Create My Videos Without Showing My Face Using AI

Due to popular demand, I have provided in this video my workflow. I also mentioned all the tools I use.

Enjoy!

31/12/2025

Your Keyboard Was Designed to Slow You Down (I mean seriously)

Stop scrolling and let me explain. Your keyboard was not initially designed for speed. It was designed to slow you down because you may type too fast just like those who first used it.

This keyboard is called Q. W. E. R. T. Y which is pronounced as Qwerty
You type on it every day.
Phones.
Laptops.
Desktops.
But almost nobody knows why it looks weird like this.

In the 1870s, a man named Christopher Latham Sholes invented the first commercially successful typewriter, patented in 1868 with partners, which became the basis for the Sholes & Glidden typewriter.
It was designed to prevent key jams, marking a huge leap in writing efficiency and creating the modern office landscape, with its legacy enduring on computer keyboards today.
There was just one problem.
People typed too fast, they said.

It happened that early typewriters had mechanical arms.
When letters were typed quickly, the keys jammed together.
The machine would stop working.
So Sholes did something clever.

He rearranged the keyboard to separate commonly used letters.
Not to help you type faster.
But to slow you down enough to prevent jams.
That layout became Qwerty.

Hereโ€™s the crazy part.
When computers replaced typewriters, the jamming problem disappeared.
But we kept the same keyboard anyway.
Out of habit.
Out of familiarity.
Out of resistance to change.

So yes.
Youโ€™re using a keyboard designed for a problem that no longer exists.
If this blew your mind, follow me for more hidden tech stories.
Like the video.
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Share it.
And drop a comment if you already knew this or if this is your first time hearing it.
Tech history is full of quiet decisions we still live with today.

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