Peter Manis wrote:
I purchased the Microsoft comfort curve keyboard because it was a mix of
a ergonomic and a normal keyboard, but without the massive rise in the
middle. It took a little to get used to it, but it has been the best
keyboard I have ever had. I am thinking about buying a couple more.
A heckuvalot of people agree with you.
For myself, I can't get my head around the attraction to the
mushy/spongy feel keyboards. How can you tell if the key has been
pressed? If I get some feedback (or for the Model M, "report" is more
accurate ;-) ) from the keyboard it seems that that allows me to
actually use less pressure than if I got no feedback.
I wonder how/whether they actually measure "ergonomic" in terms of the
actual keypresses, as opposed to the layout.
-- John.