Practicing. That's about it. Certainly noticing improvement, slow as it is. Splitting my time between practicing simple scales and arpeggios and attempting actual pieces. Only really simple stuff like "Ode to Joy" and "Turkey in the Straw" right now; just working on getting both hands involved simultaneously.
I found a piece of software called Synthesia. It's basically a free/cheap piano training program. You can run any MIDI file through it and "play" the file like a Guitar Hero song, and it also has enhanced files that separate out each hand's part. I have not yet upgraded to the paid version, though I am considering it. Between this, the GarageBand lessons and eventually Rock Band 3, lack of material to practice should never be an excuse.
One psychological issue that has come up is the left hand parts. On the Synthesia piano roll (as on a piano), the notes ascend to the right, but on a left-hand jammer keyboard, the notes ascend to the left. Oddly enough, while the mirrored layout is the cause of this mental dissonance, it's also the source of a simple solution. It's a relatively simple procedure to learn the part using my right (and more dexterous) hand first, then transfer that to my left hand; with the mirrored layout, the fingering remains 100% consistent. You definitely don't get that kind of flexibility n a traditional keyboard.
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