Saving Kinesis Advantage Practice Progress
Why Kinesis Advantage users should preserve practice history, custom presets, and analytics when moving between browsers or devices.
Practice history becomes more valuable over time. It tells you which keys improved, which presets matter, and which weak spots keep returning. Losing it means losing context.
For Kinesis Advantage adaptation, saved progress is not only convenience. It helps keep your practice routine consistent.
Before you practice
Use this guide as a repeatable drill, not as advice to grind longer typing tests. The specific problem to solve is: A user cares about keeping practice history and custom presets across devices.
- Pick three to six keys, symbols, or actions from this topic.
- Practice slowly enough that every wrong key tells you something useful.
- Stop the set while your hands still feel calm and accurate.
Preserve custom presets
The best presets are personal. They reflect your language, commands, remaps, and weak keys. If you move browsers or machines, rebuilding those presets wastes time and can break consistency.
Keep analytics history
Session history helps distinguish real improvement from a good day. It also shows whether a key is actually fixed or just avoided. That matters when adapting to a new keyboard over weeks.
Use backup before switching devices
If your practice data lives locally, browser clearing or device changes can delete it. Save a backup before changing browsers, reinstalling, or moving to another machine.
A practical SplitWells session
Run this as a short session for kinesis users who practice on multiple machines or browsers. Do not try to solve every weak key at once. The point is to leave the session knowing exactly which movement got easier and which one still needs attention.
- Create custom presets for your real weak keys.
- Practice long enough to collect useful history.
- Save a cloud backup before switching devices.
- Restore on the new browser or machine.
- Verify that presets and history are present.
After the session, write down the one key or action that caused the most hesitation. If the same item appears again tomorrow, make it the first warmup instead of burying it in a larger mixed drill.
When to move on
Move on when the selected keys feel predictable, not when the drill feels perfect. A good sign is that mistakes become obvious immediately and corrections happen without a long pause.
- Keep the same drill if you still need to look down or mentally search for the key.
- Add one or two nearby keys when accuracy is steady and your hands stay relaxed.
- Switch to a work preset once the isolated movement no longer interrupts your rhythm.
Where SplitWells fits
SplitWells stores practice locally by default and offers Lifetime cloud backup for preserving progress, presets, achievements, keyboard builds, and settings.
Start practicing