rich0d wrote:iBro wrote:Which leads me to black switches. I will be typing a lot for school, and I have heard nasty rumors about fatigue when typing long things on black switches. But could these anecdotes be over-exaggerated? If I recall, black switches have a similar actuation force as a buckling spring, but you don't see many people complain about typing papers on a buckling spring.
Only people with girly hands moan about blacks giving them fatigue whilst typing. Be a man, once you go black, you'll never go back.
I'm a sys admin who hates using the mouse (I find it counter-productive, so I ensure I use shortcut keys for as much as I can) - I also spend 90% of my personal time at home on my PC also, and I have yet to suffer from any form of ache etc owing to the keys and have used blacks for just over 2 months now..
I got a thread closed on GH for saying almost the same thing.
I have never had the problem with my fingers falling off when using black switches that many seem to.
More so I have never understood why some of the people so dead set against them also seem to like the BS IBM types which as I understand it are a greater weight ???
The problem as I saw it was that a few (this was something like 3 or 4 years back on GH) people did not like them, and I am sure they did not, but they said things to others and this feeling spread to the biomass, and in many cases there were users saying black switches make them feel faint, when I bet they had never even been in the same room as any.
But, I have seen this sort of thing on many other forums over the years, I have always called it the "hi post count problem" or more well known as The Emperor's New Clothes
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Empero ... ew_Clothes.
I come from many years of reading/posting to usenet (something like this but been around years before this flashy WWW thing) and there is no post count, others have to go on what you say (and have said),
It seems many people will believe something from someone with a higher post count over someone with a lower number even if it seems to not be right, these ppl seem to equate the greater count with a greater knowledge of whatever subject ?
Then something even stranger happened, reds started to be the new fashion.
Now all of these ppl that did not like the black switch suddenly started saying that this red switch was the best thing and all others were a waste of time ???.
I am not going to get into the old verses new black switch because I have many more 'vintage' black switched boards and 90% of my black switch use is with older boards, in fact I only have 2 new unused black switched boards, to me (and my force gauges) they seem to be 'heaver, or stronger' than the old switch, and I dont use either of them much so I dont feel I can say much about this area.
Its almost as if Cherry have reinvented the vintage black switch by giving it a slightly lighter weight and redder colour.
The best way I have found to find the best board for me it to use as many as I can and go from there.
Now I understand this is not a cheap, or easy way to do things, believe me I have spent the last 15 plus years doing so.