Well, I still think Scissor switches are pretty tactile - in fact more so than Topres. At some point it does become semantics.
Well, if you use that definition of tactile, rubber domes in general are all amazingly tactile. Not only that, but then nothing beats bottoming out a rubber dome in tactility. BAM! Yes, you
DID hit that key, it's done.
I tend to agree with iMav on this I think. While it all comes down to arguing about semantics in one sense, in another it's somewhat an important distinction to make when discussing tactility in keyboards. "Technically" anything could be called tactile in one sense or another, by the dictionary definition of the word (unless you get into some crazy no-touch device with
cameras and lasers or even amazing
holograms) if you wanted to be ultra pedantic, but I think most of what people care about when they discuss keyboards is tactile
actuation feedback, and most of the time when they shorten to saying a keyboard is tactile or not I believe this is really what they're most frequently referring to.
Maybe we should all use an acronym, instead, though. Just for clarity's sake. Since you can never have enough TLAs, we'll call it TAF. Is your keyboard TAFy enough? Well... is it?
=^,^=
In all seriousness, though, I think the following things are the most important when discussing individual keypress behavior of a keyboard:
(1) Can you immediately tell that you've actuated a key by touch alone? (you may add auditory feedback if you wish)
(1.5) Is the point of actuation reliable enough that you can achieve actuation through muscle memory even without having a tactile response AT the point of actuation (like cherry linear keys apparently)?
(2) Force required to achieve actuation
(3) Does actuating a key require that your fingers be subjected to the sharp force of hitting an inflexible surface (bottoming out on most keyboards), including post actuation (some keyboards seem to actuate above bottoming out, but the pressure to pass the point of actuation makes bottoming out almost inevitable if the force to go from point of actuation to bottom suddenly drops precipitously compared to the force to reach actuation)
Since striking a surface in that manner repeatedly is certainly one thing which can cause RSIs.
(4) How quickly does the key return/rebound to a state where it's ready to be re-actuated? How much travel is required to achieve this state (full travel to the top or simply travel to anywhere above the point of actuation)?
That's the list I would make, anywho. Well, if just jotting one out anyway. Maybe I'll sit and think about it some more.
Oh yes, and of course
(5) Does teh keys is tehys for has nice feels?
=P
But yes, if there's a change in feeling at the point of actuation, I would call that keyboard tactile. Technically all rubber domes are tactile since you can feel it bottom out to actuate (and there's that point well before actuation--you can pass it without actuating on many if you care to--when they catastrophically collapse), but ahhhhh... *I* would tend to only say something is a "tactile keyboard" if it provides tactile
actuation feedback which doesn't require or necessarily lead to hard bottoming out, personally. It's sort of a complicated description unfairly shortened, I guess. Oh well.