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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.It also goes back to the days of the mechanical typewriters, which used physical "arms" with a letter on the end to hammer the letter on to the paper through a ribbon. When the original keyboards were designed, they were arranged alphabetically. However, the typists of the day got so fast that when they were typing, the most-used letters would all be in the same region, and the same as if you have ever pressed lots of keys on a manual typewriter at the same time, the hammers clogged up. So they redesigned the layout of the keyboard so that the most used letters were evenly spaced across the keyboard (but also taking account of design issues, so it doesn't quite work out that way). Then, when they designed electronic keyboards, they stuck with the same design, as that was what people were used to by then.
A clumsy answer, but the best I can do.
Hope this helps
Click http://www.webopedia.com/TERM/Q/QWERTY_keyboard.html
for a web-page on the subject which suggests the idea I offered above is only vaguely plausible but unproven. The page also refers to the Dvorak keyboard which has never caught on. However, I believe that when speed-typing competitions were held in the past, users of the Dvorak system were almost invariably faster.