Keyboards are not fun for me anymore.
- Hypersphere
- Location: USA
- Main keyboard: Silenced & Lubed HHKB (Black)
- Main mouse: Logitech G403
- Favorite switch: Topre 45/55g Silenced; Various Alps; IBM Model F
- DT Pro Member: 0038
@adhoc: Nothing personal! I just cannot resist playing with words. In my opinion, non-native speakers of English often write more clearly than native speakers, perhaps owing to a more economical style. Thus, because native speakers tend to be more verbose, they fall more often into language traps.
- Blaise170
- ALPS キーボード
- Location: Boston, MA
- Main keyboard: Cooler Master Quickfire Stealth
- Main mouse: Logitech G502
- Favorite switch: Alps SKCM Blue
- DT Pro Member: 0129
- Contact:
Imagine that. This is the first time I've logged in for a couple of weeks. For some reason I don't have a whole lot of desire to visit anymore. That's not to say anything about Deskthority, it's still my home, but I suppose keyboards just don't mean as much to me anymore.
- wobbled
- Location: USA
- Main keyboard: HHKB PD-KB300 Pro 1
- Main mouse: Logitech MX Master 3
- Favorite switch: Topre
- DT Pro Member: 0192
Keyboards have become a money making scheme to a lot of people which really ruins the fun for us nerds. I dont live near any recycle centres so the best chance I have of getting cheap mechanical boards is via ebay, and that place is plagued with reddit guys looking to profit from boards they got for cheap, or people that do 2 minutes of googling and list their cum stained shit boards as 'rare vintage clicky keyboard' for the price of a house deposit
- kbdfr
- The Tiproman
- Location: Berlin, Germany
- Main keyboard: Tipro MID-QM-128A + two Tipro matrix modules
- Main mouse: Contour Rollermouse Pro
- Favorite switch: Cherry black
- DT Pro Member: 0010
I would rather say the reason is non-native speakers (probably of any language), at least if they are proficient enough, write more clearly than native speakers because they in fact had to really learn the language in question.Hypersphere wrote: ↑[…] In my opinion, non-native speakers of English often write more clearly than native speakers, perhaps owing to a more economical style. Thus, because native speakers tend to be more verbose, they fall more often into language traps.
As a non-native English speaker, I just can't understand how you can mix up 'its' and 'it's" or "there", "their" and "they're"
- 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
But their all so easy, Mr. Choc. Its no mean feet to get them strait when you think in English inside you’re head! We just type what were hearing; like Andrew Joy does, to my regular quiet amusement.kbdfr wrote: ↑As a non-native English speaker, I just can't understand how you can mix up 'its' and 'it's" or "there", "their" and "they're"
- Hypersphere
- Location: USA
- Main keyboard: Silenced & Lubed HHKB (Black)
- Main mouse: Logitech G403
- Favorite switch: Topre 45/55g Silenced; Various Alps; IBM Model F
- DT Pro Member: 0038
Good for you! The mix-ups you have listed are near the top of my list of 10,000 or so "pet peeves".kbdfr wrote: ↑I would rather say the reason is non-native speakers (probably of any language), at least if they are proficient enough, write more clearly than native speakers because they in fact had to really learn the language in question.Hypersphere wrote: ↑[…] In my opinion, non-native speakers of English often write more clearly than native speakers, perhaps owing to a more economical style. Thus, because native speakers tend to be more verbose, they fall more often into language traps.
As a non-native English speaker, I just can't understand how you can mix up 'its' and 'it's" or "there", "their" and "they're"
I think that another reason many US citizens are deficient in communication skills is that owing in part to the global pervasiveness of the English language, we do not feel compelled to learn a foreign language. Learning another language, even at a relatively rudimentary level, can help a person to understand more about his own language.
- 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
This will get easier as America becomes a land of two languages. And, unlike French in Canada, Spanish is only growing as a first language for generations to come.
I’m a native English speaker too, obviously, and so I benefit just as much from the world bending backwards to speak what I already know. But I agree with you that it’s better we all have at least the perspective of what any language feels like, from the outside looking in. I suspect we will, too, as Chinese and Spanish take their place among the truly global languages.
I’m a native English speaker too, obviously, and so I benefit just as much from the world bending backwards to speak what I already know. But I agree with you that it’s better we all have at least the perspective of what any language feels like, from the outside looking in. I suspect we will, too, as Chinese and Spanish take their place among the truly global languages.
-
- Location: Stockholm, Sweden
- DT Pro Member: 0011
You mean, USA? America is already a continent with quite a few languages.Muirium wrote: ↑This will get easier as America becomes a land of two languages.
Only by native English-speakers is the country with the large military in the north called "America".
- adhoc
- Location: Slovenia
- Main keyboard: HHKB
- Main mouse: MX Master 3S
- Favorite switch: 45g Topre
- DT Pro Member: 0238
That’s funny, but what isn’t is how many native speakers do not understand the phrase “I could not care less”. When somebody writes “I could care less” wanting to say the former, it tells me not only that this person can barely write in his own language, but also that he does not understand it either. And that saddens me. Especially since English is a very simple language (grammar wise, vocabulary is impressively extensive).Muirium wrote: ↑But their all so easy, Mr. Choc. Its no mean feet to get them strait when you think in English inside you’re head! We just type what were hearing; like Andrew Joy does, to my regular quiet amusement.kbdfr wrote: ↑As a non-native English speaker, I just can't understand how you can mix up 'its' and 'it's" or "there", "their" and "they're"
- 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
As if I’d lay sneaky cognitive traps…Findecanor wrote: ↑You mean, USA? America is already a continent with quite a few languages.
Only by native English-speakers is the country with the large military in the north called "America".
Anyways, as we all know, besides America, where Americans are from, the rest of the New World over there consists of Latin America, where they speak Latin. Fine language that it is.
Actually, I quite like the phrase “I could care less” as it perfectly sums up its own attitude. You care so little you can’t even be arsed emphasising it correctly!adhoc wrote: ↑That’s funny, but what isn’t is how many native speakers do not understand the phrase “I could not care less”. When somebody writes “I could care less” wanting to say the former, it tells me not only that this person can barely write in his own language, but also that he does not understand it either. And that saddens me. Especially since English is a very simple language (grammar wise, vocabulary is impressively extensive).
Now, I never actually use it—or its ironically less emphatic forebear—because I always care, or I just don’t engage at all. Such is the way of we Scots, and our own pithy layer in the language.
- adhoc
- Location: Slovenia
- Main keyboard: HHKB
- Main mouse: MX Master 3S
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Alright, I'll buy it. Next up: why don't Americans understand what "literally" and "figuratively" means?Muirium wrote: ↑You care so little you can’t even be arsed emphasising it correctly!
- 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
Because, like, "figuratively" sounds kinda fancy, maybe even to the point of effete. And when you want to literally emphasise your point, like literally, that's not the look you're going for.
I have heard people deploy "You have figuratively *got* to be taking the piss!" quite effectively. But only because they are joining in the piss extraction stakes inso doing. "Figuratively" steals all the attention, even while making what is in fact a weaker, if truer, point. Bullshit wins, so literally.
I have heard people deploy "You have figuratively *got* to be taking the piss!" quite effectively. But only because they are joining in the piss extraction stakes inso doing. "Figuratively" steals all the attention, even while making what is in fact a weaker, if truer, point. Bullshit wins, so literally.
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- Location: Canada
- DT Pro Member: -
- Hypersphere
- Location: USA
- Main keyboard: Silenced & Lubed HHKB (Black)
- Main mouse: Logitech G403
- Favorite switch: Topre 45/55g Silenced; Various Alps; IBM Model F
- DT Pro Member: 0038
@Muirium: I thought Michigan was the only place where people said, "Anyways". Perhaps we caught the virus from the Scots.
@adhoc: Regarding the "I could not care less/I could care less" problem, you have hit upon the real underlying issue that prevents many people from writing and/or speaking clearly -- a lack of clear thinking. They need logic!
In my job, I do a considerable amount of editing of other people's writing in order to produce jointly authored papers for publication. The work goes much more smoothly with some of my senior colleagues who are not native speakers of English than it does with students who are native speakers of English. Of course, there are at least two variables here, but I believe I have isolated the main reason for this difference. My senior overseas colleagues write logically, making it very easy to polish the English. The relatively inexperienced students tend not to write logically, making editing difficult because I need to correct the logic before I can begin to polish the prose.
If I could recommend one course that students ought to take in high school or early college, it would be a course in elementary logic. Alternatively, they should spend a semester on Vulcan.
@adhoc: Regarding the "I could not care less/I could care less" problem, you have hit upon the real underlying issue that prevents many people from writing and/or speaking clearly -- a lack of clear thinking. They need logic!
In my job, I do a considerable amount of editing of other people's writing in order to produce jointly authored papers for publication. The work goes much more smoothly with some of my senior colleagues who are not native speakers of English than it does with students who are native speakers of English. Of course, there are at least two variables here, but I believe I have isolated the main reason for this difference. My senior overseas colleagues write logically, making it very easy to polish the English. The relatively inexperienced students tend not to write logically, making editing difficult because I need to correct the logic before I can begin to polish the prose.
If I could recommend one course that students ought to take in high school or early college, it would be a course in elementary logic. Alternatively, they should spend a semester on Vulcan.
- Blaise170
- ALPS キーボード
- Location: Boston, MA
- Main keyboard: Cooler Master Quickfire Stealth
- Main mouse: Logitech G502
- Favorite switch: Alps SKCM Blue
- DT Pro Member: 0129
- Contact:
You've summed up a lot of my feelings on the topic.wobbled wrote: ↑Keyboards have become a money making scheme to a lot of people which really ruins the fun for us nerds. I dont live near any recycle centres so the best chance I have of getting cheap mechanical boards is via ebay, and that place is plagued with reddit guys looking to profit from boards they got for cheap, or people that do 2 minutes of googling and list their cum stained shit boards as 'rare vintage clicky keyboard' for the price of a house deposit
- fohat
- Elder Messenger
- Location: Knoxville, Tennessee, USA
- Main keyboard: Model F 122-key terminal
- Main mouse: Microsoft Optical Mouse
- Favorite switch: Model F Buckling Spring
- DT Pro Member: 0158
Bargains on ebay are harder to find these days, but prices do tend to stabilize on everything except the "hot" items that are in vogue at the moment. Ebay is the quintessential free market.
But then there is the additional problem that some of these things (eg beam springs) are truly scarce so prices may never (perhaps should never?) come down.
Evading the supply vs demand equation is seldom easy.
But then there is the additional problem that some of these things (eg beam springs) are truly scarce so prices may never (perhaps should never?) come down.
Evading the supply vs demand equation is seldom easy.
- Hypersphere
- Location: USA
- Main keyboard: Silenced & Lubed HHKB (Black)
- Main mouse: Logitech G403
- Favorite switch: Topre 45/55g Silenced; Various Alps; IBM Model F
- DT Pro Member: 0038
Today, my faith in humanity and eBay was restored, at least somewhat. I was looking for another IBM 5140 keyboard, and I asked a seller who had posted the entire 5140 computer (which is the usual situation) if he would be willing to sell just the keyboard. It turns out that he already had a spare 5140 keyboard, which he sold to me at a reasonable price.
- Myoth
- Location: Strasbourg
- Main keyboard: IDB60
- Main mouse: EC1-A
- Favorite switch: Cap BS
- DT Pro Member: -
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/LOT-OF-2x-IB ... pt=truelolHypersphere wrote: ↑Today, my faith in humanity and eBay was restored, at least somewhat.
oops
I mean they're cheap but we know what happened to them ...
- abrahamstechnology
- Location: United States
- Main keyboard: Laser with SMK Cherry mount
- Main mouse: Mitsumi ECM-S3902
- Favorite switch: Alps and Alps clones
- DT Pro Member: 0212
That's pretty sad. I'd wish these keyboard scalpers would at least put in some Matiases to keep the original keyboards usable.Myoth wrote: ↑https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/LOT-OF-2x-IB ... pt=truelolHypersphere wrote: ↑Today, my faith in humanity and eBay was restored, at least somewhat.
oops
I mean they're cheap but we know what happened to them ...
- snacksthecat
- ✶✶✶✶
- Location: USA
- Main keyboard: SSK
- Main mouse: BenQ ZOWIE EC1-A
- DT Pro Member: 0205
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Glad you've stuck around