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The computer goes clackety-clack - Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

BitDepth#1400

MARK LYNDERSAY

A RETURN to mechanical keyboards was an incidental decision after I put my laptop on a riser. With the computer's keyboard five inches above the desk, an external keyboard became a necessity.

The laptop is where most of my typing gets done, to the tune of around 5,000 words a week, but being a keyboard diva wasn't part of my experience.

Over the years, I'd just adapt to whatever was in front of me. Some keyboards were great, others were annoying.

The worst was my last laptop, a 2019 MacBook Pro that looked great, but I'd end up with random spaces in the text.

The little homing bumps on the "g" and "h" keys weren't prominent enough, and I'd sometimes miss my finger placement, typing strings of gibberish if I wasn't watching the screen.

Deciding on a keyboard turned out to be a deep dive down the rabbit hole of modern mechanical keyboard design. And that turned out to be no easy decision.

Nostalgia for early battles with the keyboard urged a return to the tactile feedback and, yes, satisfying noise of a mechanical keyboard.

Despite the ubiquity of low-profile Chiclet keys, the mechanical keyboard is enjoying a dramatic resurgence, reflected in both the variety and sometimes astronomical cost of the best models.

In choosing among this abundance, be aware that there are four main designs. The full-size keyboard replicates the massive keyboards of the earliest computers, with a full complement of well spaced letter keys, a top row of function keys and arrow keys, page up and page down keys to the right of the main key array, agreeably spaced between a full number keypad.

It's the most comfortable keyboard layout, but it's big. Putting two of these next to each other requires a spacious layout.

If all those keys are important for your work, a 96 per cent keyboard layout can be an effective compromise. All the keys are there, but compressed into a tighter space that may demand some reorientation.

Other popular versions shrink in size to 80, 75 and 60 per cent of a full-sized keyboard, with a commensurate reduction in either key area and/or a disappearance of key groups.

Bigger reductions are found on TenKeyLess (TKL) keyboards that entirely eliminate the number pad. On a 60 per cent keyboard, the key layout and spacing match the layout on a standard 13-14 -inch laptop.

But these keyboards drop the arrow keys, diminishing the usability of a keyboard too much for serious typing.

Beyond the size of the keyboard are the mechanics of the key press. You'll see the name the German keyboard manufacturer Cherry show up often, specifically references to its MX line of switches, available in red, blue and brown versions, each with its own characteristics of travel, noise and resistance.

If you happen to work in close quarters with colleagues you may want to consider models with red switches and gaskets that reduce typing noise, but who really wants to limit the triumphal chatter of inspiration?

(Here's a video of mechanical keyboard noise levels: https://b

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