Language/Multiple-languages/Culture/Keyboards
Here are some suggested input methods, but not all notable ones are covered.
Latin
QWERTY
It's created in the 1870s by Christopher Latham Sholes. But it's designed for avoiding key stuck in typewriters, so there are better alternatives in computers.
Its main advantage is the overwhelming amount of user, most keyboard shortcuts are designed according to it.
Dvorak
It's created by August Dvorak and William Dealey in 1936.
Its main advantage is efficient.
Colemak
It's created by Shai Coleman and released in 2006.
Its main advantage is convenient.
Cyrillic
JCUKEN
It's commonly called Windows layout, for Russian.
Chinese
Zhuyin
It's created by the Beiyang Government in the 1910s for teaching phonetics. Later it came into computer.
Its main advantage is easy to learn.
It's the most popular in Taiwan.
Pinyin
It's created by many linguists in the 1950s and published by Chinese Government in 1958 for teaching phonetics, being revised several times. Later it came into computers.
Its main advantage is easy to learn.
It's the most popular in China.
Cangjie
It's created by Chu Bong-Foo and named by Chiang Wei-kuo in 1976.
Its main advantage is efficient.
It's very popular in Hong Kong and Macau.
There are mainly two versions, version 3 and version 5. The former the more popular, but the latter the more reasonable.
Wubi
It's created by Wang Yongmin in 1986.
It main advantage is efficient.
There are mainly three versions, Wubi 86, Wubi 98 and Wubi New-century. The former the more popular, but the latter the more reasonable.
Japanese
Romaji
Its main advantage is easy to learn.
Kana
Its main advantage is efficient. It's the most popular in Japan.
Hangul
Dubeolsik
It's derived from typewriter, standardized in 1982.
Its main advantage is easy to learn.
It's the most popular in Korea.
Sebeolsik 390
It's created by Kong Byung Woo and released in 1990.
Its main advantage is covienient.
Sebeolsik Final
The final design of Sebeolsik.
Sebeolsik Noshift
A variant of Sebeolsik.
Arabic
Greek
Brahmic
InScript
It's standardized by Government of India in 1986, for Devanagari, Bengali, Gujarati, Gurmukhi, Kannada, Malayalam, Odia, Tamil and Telugu.