That's an interesting guess but I wouldn't necessarily agree.
I've been a touch typist as long as I can remember and have been an avid emacs user for the last 15 years. I used vim for about 2 years before switching. I do have my caps lock bound to CTRL and have ALT+(jkl;) as movement keys in emacs so that might be a sign that there is some truth to what you say.
I would guess the reason that I used vim instead of emacs at the start was the learning curve - I simply couldn't bother to learn all the emacs combinations and program in elisp whereas in vim, I could be somewhat productive without much to learn.
Once I learned emacs, it was hard to go back to anything else but I still use vim on other machines when emacs isn't available.
I've been a touch typist as long as I can remember and have been an avid emacs user for the last 15 years. I used vim for about 2 years before switching. I do have my caps lock bound to CTRL and have ALT+(jkl;) as movement keys in emacs so that might be a sign that there is some truth to what you say.
I would guess the reason that I used vim instead of emacs at the start was the learning curve - I simply couldn't bother to learn all the emacs combinations and program in elisp whereas in vim, I could be somewhat productive without much to learn.
Once I learned emacs, it was hard to go back to anything else but I still use vim on other machines when emacs isn't available.