I perfectly agree, but I am still curious about the whole mechanic of it. I was genuinely under the impression that one of the whole points of having a tactile switch is to give it a capacity of registering a command while only being half pushed as opposed to the requirement of fully pushing down the key on the linear switches.
You don't have to bottom out on linear, you just won't feel or hear (unless by software design) the key being registered.
I'm under the impression there's little in the way of not having to hit the bottom on the M if one's typing slowly. It goes almost to the bottom anyway, so if you depress a key and wait for it to catch, it will be very near the bottom. You just won't do the finger punch. It changes, however, when you're typing fast. Then you can zap the keys pretty nicely, sometimes to the point it feels as if you're merely brushing them.
FYI, I located my old M on Saturday behind my step-father's fridge. It's been back on duty since yesterday. My speed still doesn't match good rubber dome (e.g. IBM SK-8820) or good scissors but it's improving. I thought this was the keyboard I learnt to type on, but no. I think that was model F and some AT keyboard with function keys on the left.
That stuff was clicky! Almost like it would cut your finger if you pressed further. I've started a hunt, maybe I'll find one somewhere in this country. What I bought today turned out to be from a terminal, not an XT, lol. Model C2.
Don't you hate the space bar? I've put a single layer of paper tape on the metal stabiliser to instill some civilisation down there but it's not great now either (the key feels like a mule but at it least it doesn't make the earth shake... I must find thinner tape). If you want to try it yourself just don't leverage the space bar with anything that you could break if you tried, and don't pull it because there's a cord there.