Author Topic: Ergonomic? You gotta be joking  (Read 6796 times)

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Offline Rusty Rat

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Ergonomic? You gotta be joking
« on: Sat, 12 June 2010, 23:20:01 »
At today’s computer fair one of the dealers who gets a lot of my business gave me a new in the box Keytronic KT2001 ‘ergoforce’ to add to my collection. ‘Ergonomic’ because it has Varied Force Technology? Whats that rubber bands over rubber domes? I think there was a thread on here about these keyboards. Well at least it didn’t have ‘environmentally’ friendly on the box. By today’s standards a Model M is ergonomic because there is less chance of RSI and environmentally friendly because they last a very long while before ending up in Landfill.

Unicomp could promote BS technology as being environmentally friendly, if a cheap rubber dome lasts 2 years and a BS 20 years that is a lot of difference in landfill irrespective of whether they are made with ABS or so called friendly plastics.

Offline chimera15

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Ergonomic? You gotta be joking
« Reply #1 on: Sat, 12 June 2010, 23:35:54 »
Varied force technology sounds like that board that Microsoft was working on, that has pressure sensitive keys.  So for normal keypresses all you would have to do is barely touch the key for it to make a keypress, or you could actually set the gram force that you want the key to activate at.  If it's true it will be very ergonomic and customizable to individuals.  It basically turns a keyboard into like an electronic musical keyboard that has pressure sensitive keys instead of just an open and close switch.  It opens up a lot of possibilities for keyboards, and really is the cutting edge of keyboard design.

Of course keyboards are probably going to be useless when wacom gets rolling on it's spacial capacitance  touchscreens, that will do the same thing, but in 3d space.
« Last Edit: Sat, 12 June 2010, 23:40:09 by chimera15 »
Alps boards:
white real complicated: 1x modified siiig minitouch kb1903,  hhkb light2 english steampunk hack, wireless siig minitouch hack
white with rubber damper(cream)+clicky springs: 2x modified siig minitouch kb1903 1x modified siig minitouch kb1948
white fake simplified:   1x white smk-85, 1x Steampunk compact board hack
white real simplified: 1x unitek k-258
low profile: 1x mint m1242 in box
black: ultra mini wrist keyboard hack
blue: Japanese hhk2 lite hack, 1x siig minitouch pcb/doubleshot dc-2014 caps. kb1903, 1x modified kb1948 Siig minitouch
rainbow test boards:  mck-84sx


Offline audioave10

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Ergonomic? You gotta be joking
« Reply #2 on: Sat, 12 June 2010, 23:40:08 »
I would say that my Key Tronic is a better than usual rubber-dome keyboard, but that's all it is.
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new: MechanicalEagle Z77 RGB/Blues

Offline chimera15

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Ergonomic? You gotta be joking
« Reply #3 on: Sat, 12 June 2010, 23:47:18 »
Ah, 5 levels of pressure sensitivity I guess, or maybe like Ripster showed, different grams depending on the key preset...if that's what it is it's a gype since the future really is being able to set your own sensitivity.

http://www.keytronic.com/home/products/specs/euro_kt2001.htm
Alps boards:
white real complicated: 1x modified siiig minitouch kb1903,  hhkb light2 english steampunk hack, wireless siig minitouch hack
white with rubber damper(cream)+clicky springs: 2x modified siig minitouch kb1903 1x modified siig minitouch kb1948
white fake simplified:   1x white smk-85, 1x Steampunk compact board hack
white real simplified: 1x unitek k-258
low profile: 1x mint m1242 in box
black: ultra mini wrist keyboard hack
blue: Japanese hhk2 lite hack, 1x siig minitouch pcb/doubleshot dc-2014 caps. kb1903, 1x modified kb1948 Siig minitouch
rainbow test boards:  mck-84sx


Offline chimera15

  • Posts: 1441
Ergonomic? You gotta be joking
« Reply #4 on: Sun, 13 June 2010, 00:01:35 »
I've heard it's not a myth that people have been electrocuted from lightning storms through their keyboards.  I never saw how it was possible.  Maybe it was one of these keyboards? lol
Alps boards:
white real complicated: 1x modified siiig minitouch kb1903,  hhkb light2 english steampunk hack, wireless siig minitouch hack
white with rubber damper(cream)+clicky springs: 2x modified siig minitouch kb1903 1x modified siig minitouch kb1948
white fake simplified:   1x white smk-85, 1x Steampunk compact board hack
white real simplified: 1x unitek k-258
low profile: 1x mint m1242 in box
black: ultra mini wrist keyboard hack
blue: Japanese hhk2 lite hack, 1x siig minitouch pcb/doubleshot dc-2014 caps. kb1903, 1x modified kb1948 Siig minitouch
rainbow test boards:  mck-84sx


Offline Rusty Rat

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Ergonomic? You gotta be joking
« Reply #5 on: Sun, 13 June 2010, 00:05:20 »
As an expert on ESD that little added joke made me smile. Odds on it is not actually connected to a ground pin. Might even do some tests with a low voltage megger on the pins and the spacebar.

Offline Rusty Rat

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Ergonomic? You gotta be joking
« Reply #6 on: Sun, 13 June 2010, 00:16:58 »
chimera thanks for the advertising link. MPRII has little to with ESD - it just sounds good. Good advertising copy? They could have quoted meaningful MILSPECS or other standards.

Chances of getting whacked by lightning through a keyboard = zero - the cable will melt first. To prove we can set up an experiment with ripster and a IBM Mini. Give the keyboard 500k through a keytek unit.

I think ripster should do this as part of his keyboard research.

Offline kishy

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Ergonomic? You gotta be joking
« Reply #7 on: Sun, 13 June 2010, 00:19:12 »
The metal backplate of a Model M (which that wire goes to, it seems) is grounded to the PS/2 ground pin. On the computer side, that ground should continue right on to the computer case itself, which is in turn grounded on the electrical outlet.

Hmm...gonna have to investigate this now. I seem to be combining the concept of negative ground with computers...
Enthusiast of springs which buckle noisily: my keyboards
Want to learn about the Kishsaver?
kishy.ca

Offline Rusty Rat

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Ergonomic? You gotta be joking
« Reply #8 on: Sun, 13 June 2010, 00:26:36 »
Quote from: kishy;192641
The metal backplate of a Model M (which that wire goes to, it seems) is grounded to the PS/2 ground pin. On the computer side, that ground should continue right on to the computer case itself, which is in turn grounded on the electrical outlet.

Hmm...gonna have to investigate this now. I seem to be combining the concept of negative ground with computers...

That actually goes back to the IBM glory days of over engineering with floating reference points on everything. Since keyboards really don’t contain much in the way of sensitive components its more of a gimmick nowadays like those silly static straps people hang on the back of cars.

Offline chimera15

  • Posts: 1441
Alps boards:
white real complicated: 1x modified siiig minitouch kb1903,  hhkb light2 english steampunk hack, wireless siig minitouch hack
white with rubber damper(cream)+clicky springs: 2x modified siig minitouch kb1903 1x modified siig minitouch kb1948
white fake simplified:   1x white smk-85, 1x Steampunk compact board hack
white real simplified: 1x unitek k-258
low profile: 1x mint m1242 in box
black: ultra mini wrist keyboard hack
blue: Japanese hhk2 lite hack, 1x siig minitouch pcb/doubleshot dc-2014 caps. kb1903, 1x modified kb1948 Siig minitouch
rainbow test boards:  mck-84sx


Offline Rusty Rat

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Ergonomic? You gotta be joking
« Reply #10 on: Sun, 13 June 2010, 01:53:00 »
Quote from: chimera15;192663

http://forums.macrumors.com/showthread.php?t=216951

That confirms everything silly thing I have heard about MAC users.

Offline hyperlinked

  • Posts: 924
Ergonomic? You gotta be joking
« Reply #11 on: Sun, 13 June 2010, 02:19:01 »
Quote from: Rusty Rat;192667
That confirms everything silly thing I have heard about MAC users.


I know. They're ALL like that.
-

Topre: Realforce 103U Cherry: Filco Majestouch 104 (Brown), Ione Scorpius M10 (Blue)
Buckling Spring: IBM Model M1391401 ALPS: Apple Extended Keyboard II (Cream), ABS M1 (Fukka/Black), MicroConnectors Flavored USB (Black)
Domes: Matias Optimizer, Kensington ComfortType, Microsoft Internet Keyboard
Scissors: Apple Full Sized Aluminum
Pointy Stuff: Razer Imperator, Razer Copperhead, DT225 Trackball, Apple Magic Mouse, Logitech MX1000, Apple Mighty Mouse
Systems: MacPro, MacBook Pro, ASUS eeePC netbook, Dell D600 laptop, a small cluster of Linux Web servers
Displays: Apple Cinema Display 30", Apple Cinema Display 23"
Ergo Devices: Zody Chair, Nightingale CXO, Somaform, Theraball, 3M AKT180LE Keyboard Tray

Offline ch_123

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Ergonomic? You gotta be joking
« Reply #12 on: Sun, 13 June 2010, 03:15:53 »
Quote from: kishy;192641
The metal backplate of a Model M (which that wire goes to, it seems) is grounded to the PS/2 ground pin. On the computer side, that ground should continue right on to the computer case itself, which is in turn grounded on the electrical outlet.

Hmm...gonna have to investigate this now. I seem to be combining the concept of negative ground with computers...


Don't forget Greenock's grounded spacebars.

Offline ch_123

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Ergonomic? You gotta be joking
« Reply #13 on: Sun, 13 June 2010, 03:17:27 »
Quote from: hyperlinked;192671
I know. They're ALL like that.


The amazing thing was that the Mac survived that incident.

Offline hyperlinked

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Ergonomic? You gotta be joking
« Reply #14 on: Sun, 13 June 2010, 03:29:36 »
Quote from: ch_123;192678
The amazing thing was that the Mac survived that incident.


Hmm... I didn't even read the thread.

Interesting incident. I know a guy who got zapped by lighting in a similar way, but not through a computer. In Boston some years ago, our house either got hit by lighting or something leading into our house got hit by lighting. He was standing barefoot on a metal radiator trying to snap a photo of the lightning storm outside. He got enough of a charge that his legs gave out from under him and he felt this numbness surge through his legs.

He ended up being fine. His legs felt funny for a day or two, but he otherwise got away without a scratch. His modem wasn't so lucky though.
-

Topre: Realforce 103U Cherry: Filco Majestouch 104 (Brown), Ione Scorpius M10 (Blue)
Buckling Spring: IBM Model M1391401 ALPS: Apple Extended Keyboard II (Cream), ABS M1 (Fukka/Black), MicroConnectors Flavored USB (Black)
Domes: Matias Optimizer, Kensington ComfortType, Microsoft Internet Keyboard
Scissors: Apple Full Sized Aluminum
Pointy Stuff: Razer Imperator, Razer Copperhead, DT225 Trackball, Apple Magic Mouse, Logitech MX1000, Apple Mighty Mouse
Systems: MacPro, MacBook Pro, ASUS eeePC netbook, Dell D600 laptop, a small cluster of Linux Web servers
Displays: Apple Cinema Display 30", Apple Cinema Display 23"
Ergo Devices: Zody Chair, Nightingale CXO, Somaform, Theraball, 3M AKT180LE Keyboard Tray

Offline ch_123

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Ergonomic? You gotta be joking
« Reply #15 on: Sun, 13 June 2010, 03:55:32 »
Hah.

I bet it's all that aloomanum in the Mac. If it was a PC it would melt, maybe explode, but you'd probably be ok.

Also, I've read that it's only cheap computer PSUs that get fried by lightning, and that a decent one can take a short surge of about 2,500V without blowing up.

Offline Rusty Rat

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Ergonomic? You gotta be joking
« Reply #16 on: Sun, 13 June 2010, 05:03:17 »
Quote from: ch_123;192683
Hah.

I bet it's all that aloomanum in the Mac. If it was a PC it would melt, maybe explode, but you'd probably be ok.


I think you're right, if they used the real version of the metal - it would not be a problem. But perhaps  our  American friends may not understand us.

Offline Nonmouse

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Ergonomic? You gotta be joking
« Reply #17 on: Sun, 13 June 2010, 05:13:40 »
Quote from: chimera15;192629
I've heard it's not a myth that people have been electrocuted from lightning storms through their keyboards.  


Ummm....  Do you see the ironeh in this?

(Please tell me it was intentional.)

Offline chimera15

  • Posts: 1441
Ergonomic? You gotta be joking
« Reply #18 on: Sun, 13 June 2010, 09:35:56 »
Quote from: ch_123;192683
Hah.

I bet it's all that aloomanum in the Mac. If it was a PC it would melt, maybe explode, but you'd probably be ok.

Also, I've read that it's only cheap computer PSUs that get fried by lightning, and that a decent one can take a short surge of about 2,500V without blowing up.


Interestingly enough, I worked for a short time in a computer repair place, and the most frequent repair I had to do was motherboard replacement because of lightning strikes.  The most common problem was that the modem or lan line was the thing that took the hit, not the power supply.  Almost always the power supply was in perfect shape, but the rest was crispy.
Alps boards:
white real complicated: 1x modified siiig minitouch kb1903,  hhkb light2 english steampunk hack, wireless siig minitouch hack
white with rubber damper(cream)+clicky springs: 2x modified siig minitouch kb1903 1x modified siig minitouch kb1948
white fake simplified:   1x white smk-85, 1x Steampunk compact board hack
white real simplified: 1x unitek k-258
low profile: 1x mint m1242 in box
black: ultra mini wrist keyboard hack
blue: Japanese hhk2 lite hack, 1x siig minitouch pcb/doubleshot dc-2014 caps. kb1903, 1x modified kb1948 Siig minitouch
rainbow test boards:  mck-84sx


Offline kishy

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    • http://kishy.ca/
Ergonomic? You gotta be joking
« Reply #19 on: Sun, 13 June 2010, 14:07:37 »
Quote from: ripster;192723
Cable Modem BNCs


BNC:


RF coax "F connector":
Enthusiast of springs which buckle noisily: my keyboards
Want to learn about the Kishsaver?
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Offline Oqsy

  • Posts: 861
Ergonomic? You gotta be joking
« Reply #20 on: Sun, 13 June 2010, 14:18:08 »
Yeah, ripster upgraded his cable line and cable modem to use BNCs so that he could make the post above.  Plus its much quicker to disconnect/reconnect when needed.  There's a post about it around here somewhere...
[sigpic]Currently in use: Rosewill RK9000 and CH DT225[/sigpic]
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Offline nads93uk

  • Posts: 74
Ergonomic? You gotta be joking
« Reply #21 on: Sun, 13 June 2010, 14:23:11 »
Quote from: chimera15;192625
Ah, 5 levels of pressure sensitivity I guess, or maybe like Ripster showed, different grams depending on the key preset...if that's what it is it's a gype since the future really is being able to set your own sensitivity.

http://www.keytronic.com/home/products/specs/euro_kt2001.htm


that would be great for gaming, back in the day of Street Fighter I, the harder you pressed punch/kick, the harder the punch/kick would be

so you can make it so if you press it hard, you can run faster

correct me if im wrong

Offline chimera15

  • Posts: 1441
Ergonomic? You gotta be joking
« Reply #22 on: Sun, 13 June 2010, 15:26:44 »
Quote from: nads93uk;192756
that would be great for gaming, back in the day of Street Fighter I, the harder you pressed punch/kick, the harder the punch/kick would be

so you can make it so if you press it hard, you can run faster

correct me if im wrong


Yeah, absolutely.  A whole range of stuff becomes possible when a keyboard is pressure sensitive instead of just on off.
Alps boards:
white real complicated: 1x modified siiig minitouch kb1903,  hhkb light2 english steampunk hack, wireless siig minitouch hack
white with rubber damper(cream)+clicky springs: 2x modified siig minitouch kb1903 1x modified siig minitouch kb1948
white fake simplified:   1x white smk-85, 1x Steampunk compact board hack
white real simplified: 1x unitek k-258
low profile: 1x mint m1242 in box
black: ultra mini wrist keyboard hack
blue: Japanese hhk2 lite hack, 1x siig minitouch pcb/doubleshot dc-2014 caps. kb1903, 1x modified kb1948 Siig minitouch
rainbow test boards:  mck-84sx


Offline chimera15

  • Posts: 1441
Ergonomic? You gotta be joking
« Reply #23 on: Sun, 13 June 2010, 15:28:33 »
I wonder how difficult it would be to make a mechanical pressure sensitive board.  The one microsoft was playing around used some kind of next gen thing to make a rubber dome pressure sensitive, but there must be mechanical switches out there that have pressure sensitivity to them as well....

http://hackaday.com/2009/08/09/pressure-sensitive-keyboard/
« Last Edit: Sun, 13 June 2010, 15:31:20 by chimera15 »
Alps boards:
white real complicated: 1x modified siiig minitouch kb1903,  hhkb light2 english steampunk hack, wireless siig minitouch hack
white with rubber damper(cream)+clicky springs: 2x modified siig minitouch kb1903 1x modified siig minitouch kb1948
white fake simplified:   1x white smk-85, 1x Steampunk compact board hack
white real simplified: 1x unitek k-258
low profile: 1x mint m1242 in box
black: ultra mini wrist keyboard hack
blue: Japanese hhk2 lite hack, 1x siig minitouch pcb/doubleshot dc-2014 caps. kb1903, 1x modified kb1948 Siig minitouch
rainbow test boards:  mck-84sx


Offline nads93uk

  • Posts: 74
Ergonomic? You gotta be joking
« Reply #24 on: Sun, 13 June 2010, 15:48:39 »
Quote from: chimera15;192762
I wonder how difficult it would be to make a mechanical pressure sensitive board.  The one microsoft was playing around used some kind of next gen thing to make a rubber dome pressure sensitive, but there must be mechanical switches out there that have pressure sensitivity to them as well....

http://hackaday.com/2009/08/09/pressure-sensitive-keyboard/


NKRO over USB?

Offline Rusty Rat

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  • Posts: 76
Ergonomic? You gotta be joking
« Reply #25 on: Sun, 13 June 2010, 17:18:18 »
Quote from: ripster;192723
Good advice ... I use a UPS but rarely plug in the Cable Modem BNCs but since the electricity comes in through ground everything down the line probably takes the hit.  Now I gotta go find some cables - lightning season!

Ripster you are living very very dangerously providing a backdoor into your computer. Modem boards etc have so little spare physical capacitance even small hits can cause soft failure to their components.

I think you guys use 120V and two pin plugs? Us 240V lot have an Earth/Ground pin on plugs and people forget (or don’t know) this is always connected (even if the power is switched off) A big localized ground strike can really raise the Earth potential and feed it back to the power point. Bingo heaps of potential difference and plenty of damage.

Basic UPS are as good at protecting from direct and indirect strikes as rubber domes are for typing on.

Offline Rusty Rat

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Ergonomic? You gotta be joking
« Reply #26 on: Sun, 13 June 2010, 17:51:01 »
Quote from: ripster;192628
Waaah???



Show Image

You know 3M did something like this about 20 years ago. Small dissipative strip to attach to a space bar. Stopped the chances of a discharge spark causing a localised RF spike. In the good old days a lot of computers had lousy inwards RF shielding and were quite easy to knock down.

Seems like a knock off of the 3M idea, but knowing 3M I bet they made the space bar from Kromene for Keytronics. When I get the chance I am going to test the electrical properties of that space bar. (Out off idle curiosity and having the test equipment to do so)