![]() ![]() ![]() I had no idea and down the rabbit hole I went. ![]() But now I learned there are other types of switches! And there are even split mechanical keyboards. It also was not split so I stopped using it when I went to the Kinesis. I had a TKL mechanical keyboard a while ago but found the clicky Cherry MX Blue switches it used to be far too noisy for me. They keys were also nothing special, just standard mushy, membrane keys that you find on most low-cost keyboards.Ī month or so ago I started doing some research and stumbled upon the world of mechanical keyboards. I liked the Kinesis Freestyle 2, but it was pretty large and took up a lot of space in my keyboard tray. With a normal keyboard, such as with a laptop, your wrists are twisted slightly to line up with the keys which can cause strain after a while. The benefit of such a design is that you are able to keep your shoulders and wrists nice and straight when typing. This means that the keyboard is literally split into two halves, which are connected by a cord. So I've always preferred the smaller (ten keyless or TKL) designs, the smaller of which mostly look like laptop keyboards.įor the past 12-13 years I've been using a Kinesis Freestyle keyboard (Mac version), which is a split TKL design. Personally I do not like standard full-size keyboards because I find the number pad forces me to move the mouse too far to the right. As a software developer, my keyboard matters to me. ![]()
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