You won't type faster than you think. Are you inhibiting yourself, judging the worth of your output, shaping your sentences as you’re laying them down? Try free-writing: writing anything, as long as it's English (not random letters), not censoring anything, nonsense or sense welcome indifferently. What's the fastest you can write without putting on the brakes to judge? That would be the upper limit of your dexterity.<p>Your gear counts. I remember the IBM Selectric II, the one with the ball. The whirr and strike, the hum of the machine waiting if you paused to ponder, encouraged typing. Most computer keyboards today make an annoying noise, even thought it might be quiet. Hackers and writers will prefer the Das Keyboard (<a href="http://www.daskeyboard.com/" rel="nofollow">http://www.daskeyboard.com/</a>). They say the all-black one (nothing printed on the keys, like a piano) trains your brain to touch type like a Pro. I like it mostly because of the feel - the force you need to type an 'a' or a ‘;’ is less than for an ‘f’ or a ‘j’. The Das has a real smooth ride. There's something in that racket that encourages fast typing, like the first few pings of metallic raindrops building to a sustained mechanical storm - all because of your awesome creativity and work ethic. It reminds me of the IBM Selectric II, the one with the metal ball whirring and striking.<p>Practice is a huge factor in dexterity. I think my typing speed increased linearly from the 40s to the 70-80 wpm range during the four years or so when time I was typing 3,000-10,000 words (10-20) pages every day. It has plateaued there for the last 10 years, because I just don't type as much. The fastest way to write is steno. Plover (<a href="http://plover.stenoknight.com/" rel="nofollow">http://plover.stenoknight.com/</a>) has been mentioned on HN recently. But practice is the most important - Gladwell's annoying 10,000 hours, yes. The hours. Not only rack ‘em up but practice with your body and soul. What are you writing, anyway? Don't think for a second that Malmsteen played guitar to a metric, so many notes per minute. You gotta have a feel for it. Maybe you’re not meant to type fast, eh - maybe the world needs something else out of you?<p>In summary: like what you write, like your gear, and use it intensely. If you don't improve then you might be limited genetically, which doesn't matter. Once the ink dries, nobody knows how long it took you.