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henry cow
April 15th, 2011, 04:03 AM
Allow me to dodge the question a bit and describe a few keyboards that I like.

I have a Northgate Omnikey 102 from 1990 that is pretty nice, if you want a behemoth on your desk.

My keyboards at work are IBM post-Model-Ms (blasphemy, I know) that are really pretty nice and easily found for a couple of dollars second-hand. The KB-8923s are particularly good and the KB-7953s are OK. Both have conventional keys, but the layout is right. That is, (for someone like me, a big strong guy with big hands) the keys are tall, widely separated, and concave on top. There is good feel and sound, but people can sleep in the other room when I work at night.

For me, the shape, size, and configuration are what counts, and the mechanism is secondary. The noise of the Northgate can get annoying, even for me, but the light touch is gratifying.

But I have a dark secret, that would cause me shame with purists, if I cared. Compaq made great keyboards a decade ago, I have owned several models. The one I keep coming back to is the SK-2800 "internet" keyboard with extra keys scattered across the top. The primary keyboard has the nice shape and feel of the IBM 8923s, and the bonus keys are rubbery. This beige/gray keyboard came with Presarios circa 2000-03. I would upload a picture but the icon above only seems to want to let me link to a URL.

Now, I must admit that I am a sucker for rubber keys. When I buy a calculator, I look for rubber keys because they feel so good. This keyboard has a complete set of music keys (Play/Pause, skip Forward/Back, Volume Up/Down, and, most important, Mute) and 7 programmable keys that I actually want: Internet, email, photo editor, word processor, spreadsheet, places, and wikipedia are what I am currently using.

You get very spoiled very fast when opening any of these applications takes one quick stab with a fingertip (onto a rubber key - heaven). Having become accustomed to that, even half a second dragging the mouse around and making at least one click seems DREADFULLY slow and clumsy. Your "touch typing" reaction just incorporates these keys like they were just another letter or number.

I will admit that while they work perfectly in XP, I have not gotten them all up and running in Ubuntu (lineak gets me only partway there). This is a sweet keyboard and I have several of them second-hand as backups.

So there are 3 that I really like. When I find an IBM M I will certainly buy it and give it a thorough trial, but these extra buttons have totally spoiled me. I suppose that the purists hate them because they are gimmicky (and I am a person who usually hates gimmicks on principle) but this set is really just right (except for the stupid crescent moon one (is that "sleep"?) and one with a rocket that I never have figured out.

wolfen69
April 15th, 2011, 04:06 AM
Clickety Clack!!!



http://www.dansdata.com/images/clicky/ballboard1024.jpg

khelben1979
April 23rd, 2011, 07:50 PM
Logitech, Inc. UltraX Keyboard.

szymon_g
April 23rd, 2011, 07:51 PM
Microsoft Ergnonomic Keyboard 4000 - that's my keyboard of choice. nice, big, heavy

LewRockwellFAN
April 23rd, 2011, 07:56 PM
Old style ibm, hands down, like in wolfen69 (http://ubuntuforums.org/member.php?u=3744)'s post above. I used to think the ibm keyboard enthusiasts were just posing geekier-than-thou snobs. Then I got an old one for free. Nooooo comparison. They no longer make them but there is at least one company still making keyboards with buckling spring technology. They are expensive though. I'm saving my pennies.

RiceMonster
April 23rd, 2011, 08:21 PM
http://salestores.com/stores/images/images_747/73P5220.jpg

Plain and simple. Just how I like it.

Rasa1111
April 23rd, 2011, 08:32 PM
The best keyboard I've ever personally used is this one~
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16823218006
http://images17.newegg.com/is/image/newegg/23-218-006-S01?$S300$
http://www.thinkpads.com/2009/08/31/finally-photos-of-new-thinkpad-usb-trackpoint-keyboard/

It allows one to never have to reach for the mouse if they wish not to. lol

It is my favorite on laptops,
and after using one of these, my favorite desktop keyboard so far.

There are a couple others ive seen that id really like to check out, that I'd probably like even more than this one ~ (still, hard to beat the trackpoint) lol

Ive yet to own one of these,
but Ill get one one of these days.. maybe.. :lolflag:

my ideal KB would be one of those that has the programmable colored led's in the keys, and the little tiny "screen" buttons, that you can 'load' icons/apps to...

there are some sweeet keyboards out there.
soo expensive though. :o

kostageas
April 23rd, 2011, 08:37 PM
My laptop keyboard, because I'm used to it. Otherwise, I like the Compaq one that cam with my mom's computer when she bought it about a year ago. :P

I'm good with basically any keyboard, I just don't like ergonomic because I'm not used to them, and the really old ones that are clunky feeling and awkward.

uRock
April 23rd, 2011, 08:40 PM
A Microsoft Keyboard that was given to me. Surprisingly I like using MS's brand mice as well.
http://www.assist-it.org.uk/assets/images/microsoft_keyboard.jpg

uRock
April 23rd, 2011, 08:44 PM
A Microsoft Keyboard that was given to me. Surprisingly I like using MS's brand mice as well.
http://www.assist-it.org.uk/assets/images/microsoft_keyboard.jpg


PS. Moved to its own thread.

ctrlmd
April 23rd, 2011, 09:23 PM
currently i have Microsoft comfort curve keyboard 2000
been using it for a year and still working perfectly :D

im thinking about changing it with wireless keyboard
like
MS Wireless Comfort Desktop 5000
or
MS Natural Ergonomic Desktop 7000

or stay corded with
MS Natural Ergonomic Desktop 4000

Copper Bezel
April 23rd, 2011, 09:46 PM
The first computer I personally owned was a laptop, so I've never become attenuated to the big clackety kind; they feel to me like they belong to pipe organs, and I don't like having to move my hands so much, which slows me down a bit. I'm also a sucker for chicklet-style keys. My netbook keyboard is a perfect fit; it spreads just a few mm short of the case edges on a 10" Eee, so it's larger than most.

If I were using a desktop, I'd need to get a current-gen wireless Mac keyboard (http://www.amazon.com/Apple-Wireless-Keyboard-Retail-Packaging/dp/B002TMRZOQ/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1303591517&sr=8-2).

szymon_g
April 23rd, 2011, 09:49 PM
The best keyboard I've ever personally used is this one~
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16823218006
http://images17.newegg.com/is/image/newegg/23-218-006-S01?$S300$
http://www.thinkpads.com/2009/08/31/finally-photos-of-new-thinkpad-usb-trackpoint-keyboard/

It allows one to never have to reach for the mouse if they wish not to. lol

It is my favorite on laptops,
and after using one of these, my favorite desktop keyboard so far.

There are a couple others ive seen that id really like to check out, that I'd probably like even more than this one ~ (still, hard to beat the trackpoint) lol

Ive yet to own one of these,
but Ill get one one of these days.. maybe.. :lolflag:

my ideal KB would be one of those that has the programmable colored led's in the keys, and the little tiny "screen" buttons, that you can 'load' icons/apps to...

there are some sweeet keyboards out there.
soo expensive though. :o

no offence- but i've used that keyboard for few days; i sent it back because it's probably the least comfy keyboard i've ever used. reasons? small, compact size- i've got normal-sized manly hands, so its too small for me. i couldn't feel the keys, their travel was almost undetectable. also- and this is the most idiotic idea i've ever seen- some idiot swapped fn and left ctrl key /same as on many new lenovo laptops/. it's also far to light and thin- i place my keyboard on my laps- and i need normally sized and heavy keyboard to do that.

viva MSEK4K!

Lucradia
April 23rd, 2011, 09:52 PM
Logitech K750, their solar panel one.

Logitech could collaborate with wacom into making a solar-powered mouse. Simple as it is, most don't get how it would work:

1. The pad is the mouse, not the actual mouse-looking device.

2. The pad would have an on/off switch in-between the solar pads.

3. The mouse would have no batteries, just like WACOM's old mice.

4. Unlike WACOM's pen, the mouse wouldn't be confined to a mapping of the screen to the pad, it would be incremental to where your cursor currently is (a la regular mouse, or a WACOM Pen that has no WACOM Drivers yet.)

Chislucas
April 23rd, 2011, 10:16 PM
Microsoft Wireless Entertainment Desktop 8000

Lucas

aguafina
April 23rd, 2011, 11:06 PM
My faves

For everyday user friendly - Apple Aluminium

For gaming - Razer Black Widow

JRV
April 23rd, 2011, 11:44 PM
Clickety Clack!!!



http://www.dansdata.com/images/clicky/ballboard1024.jpg

You got that right, that's what I use. Best keyboard ever made. But mine doesn't have the track ball, it is an original PS/2 keyboard from 1984.

mmix
April 24th, 2011, 12:55 AM
every keyboard which i touched was/is gr8.

papibe
April 24th, 2011, 02:36 AM
I like more the mousing experience with a keyboard with no numeric pad. I recently discover the Microsoft Sidewinder x6 keyboard, in which you can change the numeric pad to the right (or remove it completely). It has a volume wheel, back light wheel, and media keys all working.

The only bad thing is the position of the ESC key (non standard, off a little to the right), but otherwise a great keyboard.

Regards.
http://www.meoxo.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/04/Microsoft-SideWinder-X6.jpg

aaaantoine
April 24th, 2011, 03:19 AM
It has to be quiet, lightweight, slim, and still have all the keys.

Other than that I'm not picky. :P

Warpnow
April 24th, 2011, 03:30 AM
I have a model m and a kb8923. The 8923 is okay but its like a toyota, better than most, but the Model M is a military tank. Not the same ballgame.

cariboo
April 24th, 2011, 04:14 AM
A Microsoft Keyboard that was given to me. Surprisingly I like using MS's brand mice as well.
http://www.assist-it.org.uk/assets/images/microsoft_keyboard.jpg

I used one of these for years, but after all those years of use, it just plain wore out. I currently have a couple of MS Ergonomic 4000s, but they aren't the same as the first one. After about 2 years of use, the letters are wearing off, and from the start the space bar was sticking, although now it works as it should, I guess whatever was causing it to stick has worn down enough not to cause a problem.

standingwave
April 24th, 2011, 07:17 AM
http://steampunkworkshop.com/images/Kb45.jpg
It reminds me of the typewriter I learned on forty years ago (it was an antique even back then) but it's actually a fully functioning keyboard for an IBM PowerStation:

http://steampunkworkshop.com/keyboard.shtml