I haven't heard of problems with Filco, but then I haven't research them as much as the Das.
What form?
As for the reports about Das Keyboard problems, I believe I'm aware of all the problems, but please fill me in if there are issues I'm not aware of. As I understand it the Das Keyboard Pro (III) was released a year ago, but it occasional had problems with the USB hub, NKRO, and was not KVM compatible. To address these issues they recently released the Model S. However, it was quickly discovered that the Model S had a design flaw, the NKRO still didn't work correctly, and sometimes a key would completely stop working. They have since recalled all Model S keyboard and are replacing them at their expense. The new keyboard (call it Model S II) is due in December.
Are these the issues you speak of? Yes, it shows they have problems, but at the same time it shows they stand behind their product.
The Das also has a USB hub which means no more bending over under my desk to plugin USB thumb drives. The benefit in my eyes to the Filco is potentially a more reliable product.
I haven't heard of problems with Filco
A dime is 2.268g btw
(don't ever trust a Brit - they still use that funny money)
They had key transposition issues as well which were quite nasty. The S, as far as I know still had all the old problems.
I thought it wasn't properly fixed, or at least someone recreated the problems?
In before someone replies "there is no right Das Keyboard".
It's only a matter of time before MS Windows recommends an M5-2...
It's only a matter of time before MS Windows recommends an M5-2...
When I originally started this thread I was trying to decide between the Das Keyboard with Cherry Blues versus Cherry Browns. I eliminated the Cherry Browns as too soft. Most people who replied suggested I get a Filco instead of the Das, so I also considered a Filco with Cherry Blues. However, I ultimately decided to go with a Das Keyboard Model S Professional.
I received my new keyboard a few days ago and I just posted a review in the "keyboard reviews" section of this forum. I love my new keyboard. The look and feel is incredible. This is the first mechanical switch keyboard I've ever used.
I've really tested the keyboard trying to reproduce the known issues with previous Das keyboards. As far as I can tell, all the previous problems have been fixed and I cannot find any new ones.
Admittedly Das doesn't have the track record that Filco does, but it looks like they finally got it right. So hopefully Filco users can keep an open mind.
Grey can grow on you.
That would argue for gray keyboards being the most practical.Show Image(http://lauriekendrick.files.wordpress.com/2009/05/couch-8-cigs-on-keyboard.jpg)
That would argue for gray keyboards being the most practical.Show Image(http://lauriekendrick.files.wordpress.com/2009/05/couch-8-cigs-on-keyboard.jpg)
I don't know how you guys can find those old, grey and beige keyboards attractive. Sure, they may be very functional, but there must be plenty of modern keyboards with the same level of functionality that aren't such an eye sore.First of all, it's all a matter of fashion. Beige happened to be the "in" color for business computers around 1980 or thereabouts, and it wouldn't have stuck with us for so long without the success of IBM-compatible PCs. Certainly several other color schemes would have been equally feasible. Anyway, fashion implies that people obviously get used to it. If this was possible 20 years ago it would work equally well today, after all humans themselves have not changed. It's just that they're used to newer fashion trends now and may thus consider older ones silly.
Now there's a reason not to be a chain smoker.Ugh. :faint2: How true.
I don't know how you guys can find those old, grey and beige keyboards attractive. Sure, they may be very functional, but there must be plenty of modern keyboards with the same level of functionality that aren't such an eye sore.
If you're looking at the keyboard, you're doing it wrong.