time
Storage? I am Storage!
I can't seem to find a thread (in the last couple of years at least) that surveys our current likes / dislikes in desktop keyboards. I really resent spending more than $100 for a halfway decent keyboard - $20 should be enough in these days of Chinese manufacture, surely?
Why aren't all keyboards backlit? We take it for granted with a phone, so why not a laptop, and even a desktop? It helps make up for the mind-numbingly stupid use of black keys (cause we all print on black paper, right?). Anyway, with my fading night vision, it helps enormously in the evenings when my eyes need a rest from bright lighting.
My current personal keyboard is a Logitech "illuminated" unit, but I can't pretend I'm happy with it. The keys started 'sticking' about 6 months after I got it, and despite the satisfying feel, my poor typing skills look even worse when I use it.
Locally, Logitech products are way over-priced, which doesn't help.
I recently tried a cheap A4 Tech backlit keyboard, but there was a problem with the finish and the customer understandably rejected it. It lacked any tactile feedback anyway.
In an attempt to avoid hassles with the customer, I plumped for a Microsoft X4 "gaming" keyboard. It gives a strong impression of quality with elaborate packaging, a reasonably stiff chassis and robust key presses. And at night, the red glow from the black keys is really something to see. Awesome.
BUT. The keys are slippery. They are somehow in the wrong place, for example, the Escape key is not easy to find as the top-left key; it's actually the second row from the top and second column from the left, and it's a half-height key. Really poor design. My typing is absolutely abysmal on it, as it was for three other people who tried it.
After three days of perseverance, I jumped on another PC with an ancient Samsung keyboard, and my typing accuracy improved out of sight immediately. I'm talking really basic things like typing URLs ...
So, what do you guys buy for other people?
Why aren't all keyboards backlit? We take it for granted with a phone, so why not a laptop, and even a desktop? It helps make up for the mind-numbingly stupid use of black keys (cause we all print on black paper, right?). Anyway, with my fading night vision, it helps enormously in the evenings when my eyes need a rest from bright lighting.
My current personal keyboard is a Logitech "illuminated" unit, but I can't pretend I'm happy with it. The keys started 'sticking' about 6 months after I got it, and despite the satisfying feel, my poor typing skills look even worse when I use it.
Locally, Logitech products are way over-priced, which doesn't help.
I recently tried a cheap A4 Tech backlit keyboard, but there was a problem with the finish and the customer understandably rejected it. It lacked any tactile feedback anyway.
In an attempt to avoid hassles with the customer, I plumped for a Microsoft X4 "gaming" keyboard. It gives a strong impression of quality with elaborate packaging, a reasonably stiff chassis and robust key presses. And at night, the red glow from the black keys is really something to see. Awesome.
BUT. The keys are slippery. They are somehow in the wrong place, for example, the Escape key is not easy to find as the top-left key; it's actually the second row from the top and second column from the left, and it's a half-height key. Really poor design. My typing is absolutely abysmal on it, as it was for three other people who tried it.
After three days of perseverance, I jumped on another PC with an ancient Samsung keyboard, and my typing accuracy improved out of sight immediately. I'm talking really basic things like typing URLs ...
So, what do you guys buy for other people?