Laptop Keyboards
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- Location: UK
- Main keyboard: Filco ZERO green alps, Model F 122 Terminal
- Main mouse: Ducky Secret / Roller Mouse Pro 1
- Favorite switch: MX Mount Topre / Model F Buckling
- DT Pro Member: 0167
Raw power
Price
Larger screen ( i admit lower res tho)
more port options (can charge it and have a monitor and a keyboard)
more powerful graphics
larger battery (admittedly the macbook's processor has a much lower TDP, but at idle ? don't think there will be that much difference)
Do we know if the type c power adaptor has a mag safe style connector ? If not that is another HUGE hit for it, i would have had to replace my old macbook several times by now if not for that amazing power jack.
- Muirium
- µ
- Location: Edinburgh, Scotland
- Main keyboard: HHKB Type-S with Bluetooth by Hasu
- Main mouse: Apple Magic Mouse
- Favorite switch: Gotta Try 'Em All
- DT Pro Member: µ
Definitely not MagSafe on this one. The journos were complaining about it from the test area.
Oddly enough, I've never pulled a laptop to the floor by its power cable. But I have had weird MagSafe moments when the plug winds up at 45º plenty of times instead. MagSafe 2 isn't as solid as the original, right?
Anyway, all cables should be smarter than just using friction. They're inherently ugly and dangerous the lot of them!
Oddly enough, I've never pulled a laptop to the floor by its power cable. But I have had weird MagSafe moments when the plug winds up at 45º plenty of times instead. MagSafe 2 isn't as solid as the original, right?
Anyway, all cables should be smarter than just using friction. They're inherently ugly and dangerous the lot of them!
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- Location: UK
- Main keyboard: Filco ZERO green alps, Model F 122 Terminal
- Main mouse: Ducky Secret / Roller Mouse Pro 1
- Favorite switch: MX Mount Topre / Model F Buckling
- DT Pro Member: 0167
Indeed mag safe one is the shit.
Even the re design of the mag safe one to make it thinner and the cable come out of the back was not as good, its the same with older 30 pin cables that had proper strain relief they where mutch better than the modern crap.
Even the re design of the mag safe one to make it thinner and the cable come out of the back was not as good, its the same with older 30 pin cables that had proper strain relief they where mutch better than the modern crap.
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- Location: Cairns, Australia
- Main keyboard: Leopold FC700R
- Main mouse: Whatever is laying around. Don't use it much
- Favorite switch: Cherry Red + O-rings
- DT Pro Member: -
- Contact:
When Apple introduced MagSafe, MacBooks had one quarter the battery life they have today.
These days you just don't plug in at all if you'd have to run the cable somewhere dangerous. It's a non issue, I don't hear of anyone destroying an iPad where MagSafe would've helped.
I think modern MagSafe has the same magnetic strength but the cable changed to give it more leverage? The magnets used to be paralel to the cable instead of perpendicular.
These days you just don't plug in at all if you'd have to run the cable somewhere dangerous. It's a non issue, I don't hear of anyone destroying an iPad where MagSafe would've helped.
I think modern MagSafe has the same magnetic strength but the cable changed to give it more leverage? The magnets used to be paralel to the cable instead of perpendicular.
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- Location: Cairns, Australia
- Main keyboard: Leopold FC700R
- Main mouse: Whatever is laying around. Don't use it much
- Favorite switch: Cherry Red + O-rings
- DT Pro Member: -
- Contact:
Also Apple has eliminate all moving parts from the electronics. So a drop is far less likely to damage anything.
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- Location: UK
- Main keyboard: Filco ZERO green alps, Model F 122 Terminal
- Main mouse: Ducky Secret / Roller Mouse Pro 1
- Favorite switch: MX Mount Topre / Model F Buckling
- DT Pro Member: 0167
The early mag safe 1s where perpendicular and they last longer than the newer ones that are parallel. Its not just the safety its the ease of use as well and durability, i have seen far too many broken solder joints on power jacks simply from wear and tear. the magsafe was one of the best things apple has come up with and its demise indicative of the problem with some of apples design now days, form over function.
- bhtooefr
- Location: Newark, OH, USA
- Main keyboard: TEX Shinobi
- Main mouse: TrackPoint IV
- Favorite switch: IBM Selectric (not a switch, I know)
- DT Pro Member: 0056
- Contact:
Fuuuuuuuuck MagSafe.
That is all.
(And, many business laptops have the power input jack mounted to the chassis, and then a cable from the jack to the motherboard or I/O board.)
That is all.
(And, many business laptops have the power input jack mounted to the chassis, and then a cable from the jack to the motherboard or I/O board.)
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- Location: Cairns, Australia
- Main keyboard: Leopold FC700R
- Main mouse: Whatever is laying around. Don't use it much
- Favorite switch: Cherry Red + O-rings
- DT Pro Member: -
- Contact:
Re: form over function.. that's nothing new.
Apple was a pure tech company in 1996 when they were about to go bankrupt. Steve Jobs pulled them out of bankruptcy and made Apple the most successful company in the world by making "form" a priority.
The first form product shipped two years after steve jobs returned to Apple - the original iMac which had no floppy drive, USB instead of serial ports, and a *colour* case right out of a children's book.
It started then, and they're still not finsihed - but the $17,000 watch they just released shows how far they've come from selling computers with an unusual colour that was otherwise identical to normal beige plastic.
Horace from Asymco points out, however, that it is not "form over function". Apple is about "form and function". Their success comes from Jony Ive's ability to make both work together. That $17,000 watch isn't just a fancy solid gold watch, it's also got a myriad of features nobody has ever seen in a watch before - until now solid gold watches were all truly form over funtion. The $2 LCD clock built into your microwave does a better job keeping time that an $80,000 gold watch, most loose or gain 10 seconds every day. Forget about heart rate monitors or making phone calls or third party software.
I disagree with you that USB Type-C is inferior to MagSafe. I think it's an upgrade. You no-longer need to plug in two cables when you sit at your desk (magsafe and thunderbolt, assuming you have a thunderbolt display with ethernet/usb/firewire/etc), now you've just got one cable to do all of that.
It would have been nice if USB Type-C had magnets, but magnets are expensive and having an industry standard cable is also very nice - more important than MagSafe. Again, that has nothing to do with form and everything to do with being pragmatic.
Apple was a pure tech company in 1996 when they were about to go bankrupt. Steve Jobs pulled them out of bankruptcy and made Apple the most successful company in the world by making "form" a priority.
The first form product shipped two years after steve jobs returned to Apple - the original iMac which had no floppy drive, USB instead of serial ports, and a *colour* case right out of a children's book.
It started then, and they're still not finsihed - but the $17,000 watch they just released shows how far they've come from selling computers with an unusual colour that was otherwise identical to normal beige plastic.
Horace from Asymco points out, however, that it is not "form over function". Apple is about "form and function". Their success comes from Jony Ive's ability to make both work together. That $17,000 watch isn't just a fancy solid gold watch, it's also got a myriad of features nobody has ever seen in a watch before - until now solid gold watches were all truly form over funtion. The $2 LCD clock built into your microwave does a better job keeping time that an $80,000 gold watch, most loose or gain 10 seconds every day. Forget about heart rate monitors or making phone calls or third party software.
I disagree with you that USB Type-C is inferior to MagSafe. I think it's an upgrade. You no-longer need to plug in two cables when you sit at your desk (magsafe and thunderbolt, assuming you have a thunderbolt display with ethernet/usb/firewire/etc), now you've just got one cable to do all of that.
It would have been nice if USB Type-C had magnets, but magnets are expensive and having an industry standard cable is also very nice - more important than MagSafe. Again, that has nothing to do with form and everything to do with being pragmatic.
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- Location: geekhack ergonomics subforum
- Favorite switch: Alps plate spring; clicky SMK
- DT Pro Member: -
You must have no pets, never spend time around clumsy people, and never plug in at places like coffee shops, huh? If the only time you plug a laptop in is at a desk, then it doesn’t matter. But if you’re used to plugging your computer in while sitting on the couch, or in bed, or at your kitchen table, etc., it’s another story.Muirium wrote: ↑Oddly enough, I've never pulled a laptop to the floor by its power cable.
My brother tripped over my laptop cord in ~2006 (a 12" powerbook, used the previous round TRS-type plug), and it broke the plug off inside the jack and broke the jack in the process. Had to take literally every part out of the computer and replace the DC-in board.
Magsafe is a godsend.
Huh?bhtooefr wrote: ↑Fuuuuuuuuck MagSafe. That is all.
Magnets definitely aren’t expensive, in this context.abhibeckert wrote: ↑It would have been nice if USB Type-C had magnets, but magnets are expensive and having an industry standard cable is also very nice
But I don’t think it would make any sense to attach a connector with as many contacts as USB type C has with magnets. Magsafe works because it’s just a power cable.
- bhtooefr
- Location: Newark, OH, USA
- Main keyboard: TEX Shinobi
- Main mouse: TrackPoint IV
- Favorite switch: IBM Selectric (not a switch, I know)
- DT Pro Member: 0056
- Contact:
Admittedly, it's MagSafe 2 in my case, but I prefer a more secure power connection for how I use my machine. Too much unintentional unplugging with MagSafe 2.
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- Location: Cairns, Australia
- Main keyboard: Leopold FC700R
- Main mouse: Whatever is laying around. Don't use it much
- Favorite switch: Cherry Red + O-rings
- DT Pro Member: -
- Contact:
That PowerBook had 50Wh battery that lasted 3 hours.jacobolus wrote: ↑But if you’re used to plugging your computer in while sitting on the couch, or in bed, or at your kitchen table, etc., it’s another story.
My brother tripped over my laptop cord in ~2006 (a 12" powerbook, used the previous round TRS-type plug), and it broke the plug off inside the jack and broke the jack in the process. Had to take literally every part out of the computer and replace the DC-in board.
Third party tests aren't in yet, but based on recent comparisons between Apple's official battery claims and third party tests, the new MacBook will last somewhere between 8 and 10 hours.
And since it's only a 40Wh battery, it charges really fast.
Unlike your PowerBook, this one never needs to be plugged in on the couch or at the kitchen table. If it's flat, plug it in while you make a cup of coffee, then unplug it and use it off battery for an hour or two. Then plug it in overnight and take it to work the next day, use it all day at the office on battery, plug it in while you have a shower, and it'll be almost fully charged.
MagSafe isn't needed anymore.
Not expensive for a MacBook, but too expesnive for recharging the LED lights I use on my bicycle. Those will be USB Type-C one day, and they'll use the same charging cable as a MacBook.Magnets definitely aren’t expensive, in this context.abhibeckert wrote: ↑It would have been nice if USB Type-C had magnets, but magnets are expensive and having an industry standard cable is also very nice
- Ace
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- Location: TX, USA
- Main mouse: Magic Mouse/Trackpad 2
- Favorite switch: Membrane Buckling Spring
- DT Pro Member: -
I hate to bring back a dead thread, but has anyone here tried the board on the Chromebook Pixel? It looks like a DNA clone of an Apple chiclet, but those who've used it say it feels much better. Thought I'd drop in and see if anyone here considers it note-worthy.
- Ace
- §
- Location: TX, USA
- Main mouse: Magic Mouse/Trackpad 2
- Favorite switch: Membrane Buckling Spring
- DT Pro Member: -
So..............................when is someone gonna do a review of the board?Stabilized wrote: ↑I have to admit that the best feeling laptop keyboard I have used has been my Macbook pro.
If you're looking for a laptop with mechanical keys then this is the only one available to my knowledge:
http://www.msi.com/product/nb/GT80-2QE- ... o-overview
Alternatively you could just carry around a 60% board and have any laptop you want
- Ace
- §
- Location: TX, USA
- Main mouse: Magic Mouse/Trackpad 2
- Favorite switch: Membrane Buckling Spring
- DT Pro Member: -
That's pretty much what I've decided. To keep things separate. MSI's Titan (two posts above) is a combined daily driver keyboard (meaning it's something that can be used 90% of the time, with the other 10% being when I want to use a Topre or BS), laptop, and gaming PC. With new docking station graphic amplifiers, I can keep these three things separate. A 60% board, a nice gaming notebook (good balance of power/battery/size/weight/price etc.), and a docking station.XMIT wrote: ↑I have a little V60 (very similar to KBC Poker) with DSA Dolch that I carry around with my tablet. Works for me.
Buying the three things separate will give me a lot more freedom, and it will also end up being considerably cheaper.