Why are you into keyboards?
- hellothere
- Location: Mesa, AZ USA
- Main keyboard: Lots
- Main mouse: CST2545W-RC
- Favorite switch: TopreAlpsHallEffectTopreAlpsHallEffectTopreAlps
Probably me. I know that there was at least one other kb that was selling, but that one didn't have Windows keys.
While the sound they make is kinda cool, I found them to be a bit bindy on far-off-center key presses. As I've mentioned elsewhere, I don't really type like your normal person, so that might be more me than anything else. Also, I did not care for the original keycaps. Probably silk-screened or pad-printed. As mentioned in the ad, I replaced all of them with double-shots, except for the bottom row.
The previous owner had retr0brighted the caps until the legends were fairly washed out. All that being said, the buyer got the kb at a really decent price. He might be able to get a profit just by parting it out.
While the sound they make is kinda cool, I found them to be a bit bindy on far-off-center key presses. As I've mentioned elsewhere, I don't really type like your normal person, so that might be more me than anything else. Also, I did not care for the original keycaps. Probably silk-screened or pad-printed. As mentioned in the ad, I replaced all of them with double-shots, except for the bottom row.
The previous owner had retr0brighted the caps until the legends were fairly washed out. All that being said, the buyer got the kb at a really decent price. He might be able to get a profit just by parting it out.
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- Main keyboard: Model F Labs F77
- Main mouse: mx master 3
- Favorite switch: Buckling Springs
I write a lot for my research so I might as well make it slightly more appetising.
- Thorogrimm
- Location: England, UK
- Main keyboard: Niz C103
- Main mouse: Razer Viper Mini
- Favorite switch: Topre Electro-Capacitive
- They're part of my daily life (gaming, typing essays or messages, browsing, etc).
- I love the tinkering aspect as well as the satisfaction I get from restoring really old ones because it's like breathing life into a useful tool.
- Each keyboard can have it's own charm and character to them--including what is the most quintessential appeal to all keyboard enthusiasts, which is the typing experience that can vary from all different brands and switches.
- There's a layer of excitement for me when trying new switches because there's a slight ASMR appeal as well as the feel each one gives (my personal favourite is VERY tactile keyboards).
- And I just enjoy the history and the community revolving around keyboard buffs, and it's mainly from watching Chyrosran's videos that I know so much about keyboards and have come to respect a lot of the nuances and character (or lack thereof) that each keyboard posesses.
- It's just fun and humans have an inherant desire to collect and find niche hobbies.
- Bjerrk
- Location: Copenhagen, Denmark
- Main keyboard: Cherry G80-1800 & Models F & M
- Main mouse: Mouse Keys, Trackpoint, Trackball
- Favorite switch: IBM Buckling Springs+Beamspring, Alps Plate Spring
Absolutely, that's legit!dogskipper wrote: ↑26 Mar 2021, 15:32I write a lot for my research so I might as well make it slightly more appetising.
But the same goes for my office chair. I sit in it a lot, so I might as well have a good one. But most of the people here (myself included) are into keyboards on a level that far surpasses their interest in office chairs
(awaits the influx of office chair nerds)
- hellothere
- Location: Mesa, AZ USA
- Main keyboard: Lots
- Main mouse: CST2545W-RC
- Favorite switch: TopreAlpsHallEffectTopreAlpsHallEffectTopreAlps
SteelCase Leap, FTW! You did ask for it.
Mine's a couple years old and was "remanufactured." I searched a looong time to find a very ergonomic chair that was inexpensive and had, at the very least, swivel and height adjustments for the arm rests.
I think the Herman Miller Aeron is OK. I would like more padding. The Embody is about perfect, but I can't justify the cost.
Mine's a couple years old and was "remanufactured." I searched a looong time to find a very ergonomic chair that was inexpensive and had, at the very least, swivel and height adjustments for the arm rests.
I think the Herman Miller Aeron is OK. I would like more padding. The Embody is about perfect, but I can't justify the cost.
- Spockmaster
- Location: United States
- Main keyboard: I rotate between 4 different keyboards
- Main mouse: Razer Viper
- Favorite switch: Pine White Alps
Lots of different reasons, I'm finding. Last spring I only had one keyboard (Corsair K68 with MX Reds) and it had been my first mechanical keyboard since the Model F with my Dad's 5150 almost 30 years ago. Now I have 5, and will have 6 by next week as I have one in transit. That also doesn't include the Corsair, I mailed that to my younger brother.
- I really like the typing feel of keyboards. Like, really like it. Especially tactile, both pure tactile and clicky. And I like having lots of variety, I swap out a number of different keyboards on a semi-daily basis because I enjoy switching it up.
- I really like the sound. Typing sound is really important to me.
- I really like the physical act of typing, though I'm not super sure why.
Anyways, I should probably stop buying more keyboards before my wife kills me in my sleep.
- I really like the typing feel of keyboards. Like, really like it. Especially tactile, both pure tactile and clicky. And I like having lots of variety, I swap out a number of different keyboards on a semi-daily basis because I enjoy switching it up.
- I really like the sound. Typing sound is really important to me.
- I really like the physical act of typing, though I'm not super sure why.
Anyways, I should probably stop buying more keyboards before my wife kills me in my sleep.
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- Location: San Francisco
- Main keyboard: Das Keyboard
- Main mouse: Logitech
- Favorite switch: MicroSwitch Hall Effect
- DT Pro Member: 0240
Been using an Ergon since they came out forty-odd years go.hellothere wrote: ↑26 Mar 2021, 15:55I think the Herman Miller Aeron is OK. I would like more padding.
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- Location: Texas
- Main keyboard: Kinesis Model 130
- Main mouse: Logitech M-S48, Razer Viper
- Favorite switch: MX Browns
- DT Pro Member: -
I've really thought about picking up an old Aeron to match my Kinesis Advantage (and a Marble Man FX) to really capture the 90's carpel tunnel scare + dot com bubble vibe. All three are remarkable proscriptive with how the user uses them, typing with the wrong fingers or slouching are basically impossible.hellothere wrote: ↑26 Mar 2021, 15:55SteelCase Leap, FTW! You did ask for it.
Mine's a couple years old and was "remanufactured." I searched a looong time to find a very ergonomic chair that was inexpensive and had, at the very least, swivel and height adjustments for the arm rests.
I think the Herman Miller Aeron is OK. I would like more padding. The Embody is about perfect, but I can't justify the cost.
But I don't use chairs with armrests. My current chair came out of a 90's Mercedes C class, but I never got the angling right. The padding is great though, foam + springs covered in black pleather is surprisingly comfortable even after several hours.
Something like a SteelCase Leap is a good thing to consider... I don't want to pay "keyboard prices" for a used chair
I think I'll look into this, I love "bubbly" ergonomic products, they look more comfortable than the skeletal (mesh chairs, logitech space ship mice) that came later.MMcM wrote: ↑31 Mar 2021, 22:30Been using an Ergon since they came out forty-odd years go.hellothere wrote: ↑26 Mar 2021, 15:55I think the Herman Miller Aeron is OK. I would like more padding.
- ddrfraser1
- Location: United States
- Main keyboard: Changes weekly
- Main mouse: MX MASTER
- Favorite switch: Lubed 55g BKE Redux Domes
- Contact:
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- Location: Texas, USA
- Main keyboard: Pok3r w/ Clears
- Main mouse: G500
- Favorite switch: Buckling Spring
- Contact:
I'm into keyboards because my entire life since I was a child has been structured in some fashion around computers. Beginning as a teenager it became my career. To me, the input devices you use on your computer is one of the most critical things to understand. It's the thing that gives a computer its soul, and there's a sort of intimacy that comes from typing and using input devices that is absent is so much of the rest of the process of computing. In so many ways, you could say that everything you make a computer to do starts with the keyboard, no matter how grandiose it becomes, and for that reason it's absolutely crucial to me to have a complete understanding of the keyboards I use as well as a deep connection to their use.