Author Topic: Tactus Keyboard  (Read 1950 times)

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Offline IBI

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  • Posts: 492
Tactus Keyboard
« on: Tue, 28 April 2009, 14:52:01 »
No, not that Tactus, instead here's a keyboard with walls on.



Close up detail:


Quote
Learning to Touch-Type Takes Much Less Time
TACTUS shortens the time required to learn to touch-type to 4-5 hours. The TACTUS ridges eliminate the need for training the fingers to hit the correct keys, which is the step that takes time and requires constant practice. In the TACTUS keyboard, the ridges tell the finger its position on the keyboard unequivocally so you only need to learn where the keys are.

Touch-Typing is Easier
The TACTUS ridges help achieve good speed and high accuracy without the need for long and constant practice. TACTUS therefore makes touch-typing much easier for people who do not spend a lot of time typing. This is the case of people who use a computer as part of their jobs but do not spend the majority of their professional time typing. These people are unlikely to spend sufficient time at the keyboard building their touch-typing skills. With TACTUS, they can touch-type effectively even if the time spent at the keyboard is small.


Website.

The keys seem to be rubber dome from the specifications, but it does have the 'RPG dungeon map' coolness factor going for it.
Owned: Raptor-Gaming K1 (linear MX)(Broken), IBM Model M UK, Dell AT102W, Left-handed keyboard with Type 1 Simplified Alps.

Offline FKSSR

  • Posts: 529
Tactus Keyboard
« Reply #1 on: Tue, 28 April 2009, 15:46:03 »
wow.  weird. :)
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Offline dw_junon

  • Posts: 96
    • http://www.9999hp.net/
Tactus Keyboard
« Reply #2 on: Tue, 28 April 2009, 16:40:43 »
Potentially quite brilliant (4-5 hours though?...).  I'm guessing they wouldn't make IBM compatible keycap uppers, alas.
ARC/Chicony KB-5181 XT/AT blue ALPS? 101 US FCC ID E8H51KKB-5181 • AST ASTKB102 AT capacitive rubber dome 102 UK ISO
Cherry G80-2100 AT black Cherry 126 key German ISO unique • Compaq Enhanced III PS/2 unknown rubber dome 102 UK ISO
Datacomp DFK102ARA03 AT 102 blue ALPS? US/Arabic FCC ID blank, S/N 37880001 • Dell AT102W PS/2 Black ALPS 105 UK ISO x2
Fujitsu KFB4725-102 AT membrane rubber dome with spring 105 UK ISO • Hewlett Packard C1405A AT rubber dome 102 UK ISO
IBM 0989705 XT/AT no LEDs Model M 102 US/Arabic  • IBM 1388076 Industrial AT Model M 102 UK ISO
IBM 1389260 3179/3180 Display Station Model M 122 US 3270 x2 • IBM 1391406 PS/2 Model M 102 UK ISO x2
IBM 1397003 PS/2 Model M "Host Connect" emulator 122 German ISO • IBM 71G4643 PS/2 Model M Quiet Touch "Ouch!    Rubber spring" 102 UK ISO x2
IBM 5640987 3178 Display Station Model C2 capacitive buckling spring 87 key US 3270 • IBM 556-712-01 RT PC rubber dome [same as 2nd PCjr kbd?] 101 US
IBM 6450225 PC/AT capacitive buckling spring 84 key UK PC/AT • Lexmark 8125460 Model M2 102 UK ISO
NMB RT-102 117456-002 AT Hi-Tek black, clicky 102 UK ISO • Olivetti ANK 2462 M24 Personal Computer keyboard 2 clicky Olivetti spring module 102 UK unique
Ortek MCK-142Pro AT white ALPS 142 key UK • Sun 540-1006-03 Type unknown linear(?) keyswitch 2 87 key SunType2
Wang 724 725-3771-UK salmon ALPS 110 key UK Wang724 • Making this list hasn\'t half scared me...
[/I]

Offline huha

  • Posts: 388
Tactus Keyboard
« Reply #3 on: Tue, 28 April 2009, 17:15:01 »
The idea is quite nice, but the price is a joke. These are standard keyboards with different keycaps, which does in no way justify the price. They start at about $85, which is just too much for a rubber dome board.

-huha
Unicomp Endurapro 105 (blank keycaps, BS) // Cherry G80-3000LSCDE-2 (blues, modded to green MX) // Cherry G80-3000LAMDE-0 (blacks, 2x) // Cherry G80-11900LTMDE-0 (blacks, 2x) // Compaq G80-11801 (browns) // Epson Q203A (Fujitsu Peerless) // IBM Model M2 (BS) // Boscom AS400 Terminal Emulator (OEM\'d Unicomp, BS, 2x) // Dell AT102DW (black Alps) // Mechanical Touch (chinese BS) Acer 6312-KW (Acer mechanics on membrane) // Cherry G84-4100 (ML) // Cherry G80-1000HAD (NKRO, blacks)

Offline D-EJ915

  • Posts: 489
  • Location: USA
Tactus Keyboard
« Reply #4 on: Tue, 28 April 2009, 19:54:25 »
^ that actually looks sweet, too bad the keyboard is a piece of ****

Offline xsphat

  • Posts: 2371
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Tactus Keyboard
« Reply #5 on: Tue, 28 April 2009, 21:28:25 »
:puke:

Offline bigpook

  • Posts: 1723
Tactus Keyboard
« Reply #6 on: Tue, 28 April 2009, 21:58:50 »
Quote from: xsphat;87990
:puke:


These smiley's you guys have been using are just great....  : )
HHKB Pro 2 : Unicomp Spacesaver : IBM Model M : DasIII    

Offline rdjack21

  • Posts: 896
Tactus Keyboard
« Reply #7 on: Tue, 28 April 2009, 22:08:58 »
Quote from: ripster;87914
This is another variation,  the Keyright ($40).  Actually has a patent:

Click the pic for webite but watch out for those popup talking people
Show Image



- Ripster

P.S.  My kid claims he can type faster without using the pinkies.   At this combative age I don't want to make a big deal of it.

I would think that the best keyboard to learn on would have blank keys so you don't look at the keyboard at all. You would need a keyboard layout on the screen while learning but after you learned you would no longer need that and you would not have the really bad habit of looking at the keyboard to find a keys.
Keyboards
Topre Capacitive: Realforce 87U, Realforce 86U, HHKB Pro 2, Topre MD01B0, Topre HE0100, Sun Short Type, OEM NEO CS (x2), NISSHO Electronics KB106DE
Buckling Spring: IBM Model M Space Saver (1291472), Unicomp Customizer x 2
Cherry Brown: Filco FKBN87M/EB, Compaq MX11800
Black Alps: ABS M1
Not so great boards Rare Spring over dome OKI, Sun rack keyboard

Trackballs - Trackman Wheel (3), Trackman marble (2)
Keyboards I still want to get - Happy Hacking Keyboard Pro 2 the White version, Realforce 23U number pad in black and maybe white, μTRON ergo board with Topre switches.
Previously owned - [size=0]SiiG MiniTouch (White Alps), Scorpius M10 (Blue Cherry), IBM Model M13[/size]

Offline xsphat

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Tactus Keyboard
« Reply #8 on: Tue, 28 April 2009, 22:10:57 »
That keyboard would be for Windows.

Offline bhtooefr

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  • Location: Newark, OH, USA
  • this switch can tick sound of music
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Tactus Keyboard
« Reply #9 on: Tue, 28 April 2009, 22:19:14 »
I'll note that I rarely use my pinkies while typing. IMO, there's not one correct form. There's correct forms for each person, and those forms can be different.

Offline bigpook

  • Posts: 1723
Tactus Keyboard
« Reply #10 on: Tue, 28 April 2009, 22:40:31 »
I use all fingers including the pinky. I agree as to correct form. Everyone is different.
HHKB Pro 2 : Unicomp Spacesaver : IBM Model M : DasIII