Does Anybody Do This

I've seen a few gun blogs posting about the Glock "Gadget" this week. Most of the posts read more like paid advertising (nothing wrong with that) than genuine reviews but they all make a claim that I'm curious about. According to the post on The Firearm Blog:

I agree with ToddG from Pistol Forum that holstering a hammered firearm is indeed safer than holstering a common striker-fired handgun. This is principally because a shooter can “ride the hammer” to ensure it cannot fall during the holstering movement.

Striker-fired guns like Glock, M&P’s, and others on the other hand can easily discharge when they are holstered improperly, either with something catching the trigger or a booger-picker not quite out of the way.

The “Gadget” adds the “hammer-riding” capability to a striker-fired pistol to make it easy for the shooter to holster the weapon and physically tell the striker is being pulled prior to a discharge. (That said, it is much easier to pull a trigger in a downward motion than it is for one to hold the striker in. It may be possible to have the gun go off and a shooter injure their thumb during the discharge).

Does anybody actually "ride their hammer?" I've been shooting for a long time and I have never seen anybody "ride their hammer" when holstering a hammer-fired pistol. I certainly haven't done this. As far as I can tell this is a marketing myth created to sell a device that most people would otherwise find entirely unnecessary.

So I ask you, the greater Internet, do any of you actually "rides your hammer" when holstering a hammer-fired pistol?