http://www.ergocanada.com/ergo/keyboards/mechanical_vs_membrane_keyswitches.htmlThis site got the terms in the headers mixed up. When they say "membrane keyboard", they actually mean "rubber dome".
http://www.ergocanada.com/ergo/keyboards/mechanical_vs_membrane_keyswitches.html
The Cherry blue switches are nice, but the amount of gap between the click and the actuation point is irritating.
What do you mean? Doesn't the click happen at the same time as the actuation? Do you mean that hearing the click doesn't mean the keypress has been registered?
Buckling springs (in the Model M) are nice middle-of-the-road between good and bad mechanical switches, but they have a very quickly increasing resistance curve after the tactile point.
Although I think RSI is more to do with overall ergonomics. How you sit and where you put your keyboard and that kind of stuff can make an awful lot of difference.
Even if the results are not clear, I'd prefer to get some stats on why it's worth to switch.
Yes and no. Since the switch actually pushes down a secondary plunger to make the click, the click is inherently separate from the actuation or the tactile point.
That is not true. When a blue MX clicks it has definitely closed the switch, since the white click bullet is what holds the contacts open.
Perhaps it holds the contacts open. But the "click" plunger does not move directly with the main plunger. It's not simultaneous.
That is not true. When a blue MX clicks it has definitely closed the switch, since the white click bullet is what holds the contacts open.
Perhaps it holds the contacts open. But the "click" plunger does not move directly with the main plunger. It's not simultaneous.
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I've heard that rubber domes are worst for your health. Just look at that guy eating one. He's turning green already!