I had the same concerns at first, but then I read this and other posts like it and never looked back: http://sermoa.wordpress.com/2011/12/16/colemak-and-vim-but-w.../
I decided to not mess with .vimrc but simply relearn all the shortcuts. It was painful at first but now it works great, I use vim just as productively as before, just pressing different physical keys. And I do consider myself a semi-proficient vim user. Of course, going back to using vim with a qwerty layout would probably be hell, whereas I can sort of manage normal text input with qwerty :)
Look, I'm not arguing for forbidding people from doing work they enjoy, the idea is rather to put slightly different incentives in place. It seems much better for people bored to death at work for it to be socially acceptable to work less, especially when half the population would be working full time and the other half not having a job at all. And we have to encourage people to find fulfilment through other means than 40-hour a week employment. I think ideas such as these have a lot of promise, laying the foundations for a much more flexible job market where people can work more when they're able and there is work to be done, and less otherwise: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v22SdEMzxO4 That's not what I'm saying. Artificially making sure there are enough jobs to go around makes no sense, then we might as well hire people to dig holes and other people to fill them. I just think we should curtail over-consumption and actually let people enjoy the fruits of the record high productivity that automation brings. A lot of people work way too much currently, grinding themselves down instead of investing in themselves and leading sustainable lives, by spending more time on learning and growing as human beings. We have the resources to do better.We're talking about idling the populace for half their time, then denying them the resources to take advantage of the slack.
But considering we're basically making everyone take half a job - purely because we want there to be enough jobs to go around - means that actually applying those skills is going to become a sticky issue.
Naturally, it takes a shift of mindset among people to place a higher value on leisure than on prestige. However, if we recognize it as a benefit for society it could be encouraged and worked towards, just like ever increasing consumption and demand was encouraged during the 20th century as a political and economic tool. Of course, we already have enough resources to greatly increase the median quality of living, the problem is just distribution.In other words, "get used to the wages you can earn working part-time."
I've actually been using standing desks myself on and off for a bit over a year (though currently I'm in an office without that option). The experience was nice, and I was able to stand for hours at a time while working, though I did like to have the option of sitting down once in a while. It's hard to say for sure but I did feel like I got a focus and productivity boost from standing up.