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Looking for a good keyboard
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General information
Forum:
Windows
Category:
Computing in general
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
01178123
Message ID:
01178201
Views:
20
I would buy the blank keyboard if it was cheaper. $80 for a keyboard (without bells and whistles) is a lot.
recursion (rE-kur'-shun) n.
  see recursion. 
I like your signature! I remember that same definition from a great game I used to play as a kid: Monkey Island


>Heh heh. Yeah, I'd seen that some time ago but lost the link. Thanks for bringing it back. Actually, most of us could probably do just fine on a blank keyboard, although I'm not sure I'd want to.
>
>Back in the days of DOS, I had kind of the opposite experience once: the monitor went out on a critical machine, and I had to enter a series of network commands (I forget for what purpose, but it was important at the time) via the keyboard without being able to see what I was typing. Nobody was as surprised as me when I actually got it right!
>
>
>>Here is the keyboard for you:
>>http://www.thinkgeek.com/computing/input/8396/
>>No bells and whistles, not even letters <s>
>>
>>>Does anybody have a keyboard they really like? I'm not talking about bells and whistles like multimedia buttons or wireless connectivity and such -- a conventional 101-key layout would be just fine -- but what I'm looking for is one with a good tactile response and key action that isn't mushy, wiggly, noisy, or otherwise weird and annoying during heavy use. In other words, something you can touch-type on all day and not feel like it's slowing you down or wearing you out. Any recommendations?
Semper ubi sub ubi.
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