I'm ready to actually purchase a keyboard, but I just can't seem to make a decision. Someone help me out.
First, the keyboard is for work, where I sit in an awful half-height metal cubicle. I'd prefer the keyboard to be reasonably quiet. However, I found that there are pretty much none of the keyswitch clips from the roundup that I didn't feel guilty about playing after calibrating, more-or-less, to my mouse.
So I figure, screw it. Everyone else can wear earplugs. This seems to pretty much mean that the Cherry Browns I was considering are out of the running. They don't really seem to be all that much quieter, so why trade away performance?
Okay, the Topre switches were probably quiet enough, but I'm not really sure that I want to spend well over $200 for a keyboard. Which actually brings me to my second issue.
If I'm going to spend real money on a keyboard, I'd rather get one that's well made. I recognize that most of the money is going into the switches, but I'd be more than willing to pay a little more for a keyboard that has some real build quality. I mean, nothing is going to be my powder-coated steel tankproof Model M (which, belying my previous sentiment, I cannot possibly bring to work), but I'd rather get one that feels like it isn't going to break if I look at it funny.
Third, I refuse to buy a keyboard that doesn't have a decent scoop to the key layout, which is actually my main complaint with my current keyboard, far moreso than the key action.
Fourth, I'd prefer to get a keyboard that has as little extraneous casing as possible. I actually like my current keyboard quite a bit from that standpoint. Its casing is quite similar to the Filcos. Most importantly, I don't want any sort of (at least unremoveable) wristrest. Next, I'd like to waste as little left-right space as possible. (I've seriously considered a tenkeyless keyboard, but I think I use the numpad a little too often for that. I may change my mind.) I'd prefer to avoid wasted space at the top (à la the Das), but that's just aesthetics, really.
Fifth, I always remap CapsLock to Control. (Who uses CapsLock?) I'd idly like to get a keyboard where I can replace the CapsLock keycap with something else. I've considered a blank keycap board partially for that reason. But I find that I occasionally look at the keyboard to get my bearings when I stop typing for a second. I'm not sure if the blank keycaps would get me out of that habit, or if it would drive me nuts. Relatedly, this keyboard is going to be mostly used under Linux, so key layout of the meta keys doesn't bother me all that much; I'm likely to remap them all regardless. I'd kinda prefer not to have a Windows keycap; it just tweaks me wrong. Which also pushes me towards blank keycaps, or the Das, with its alternative keycaps. (Not that I want a stupid penguin on my keyboard, either.)
Right now my leaders are the Matias TactilePro 3 and one of the Filcos. (One of the best keyboards I've ever used was what I now believe to be an Alps-based keyboard, based on the sound it made; more of a "snikt" than a "ping". It was great until it got fouled with sheetrock dust.) Close behind are the Topre (I particularly like the black-on-black aesthetic) and the Das. I'm pretty sure I'd be buying one of the Topres if not for the price. (The only negatives otherwise are the case bulk above the keys and the ugly LED surround, neither of which is a huge deal.) I don't think there's anything I don't like more, specification-wise, on the Filcos than on the Das, but Das does have that no-questions-asked return policy. (I suppose I could get the blue, return it, get the brown, return it, then get a Filco with whichever switch I liked better. If I were that nefarious. Which I pretend not to be.)
So if anyone can provide any feedback, I'd appreciate it. I probably just need a shove in one direction or another. I've been looking at them so long that it's lost all meaning, and I just can't seem to get off the pot.