Dear keyboard gurus,
I'm new to the forum, so my apologies in advance if this is rehashing an old topic (although superficial mining revealed no evidence).
I've been typing on PC keyboards since the mid-80s. In the last decade or so I grew sicker and sicker with keyboard technology and layout, especially since the emergence of modern laptops. Recently, I started delving deeper into mechanical switch technology, hoping that this will remedy my disgust with modern day keyboards and let me relive the joy of typing that I recall having as a kid... If all goes well, I'll likely end up with a nice tenkeyless MX Blue Filco, or similar.
My preference for a tenkeyless stems from the desire to reduce unnecessary hand motion---I'm a right handed trackball user. That said, I am still hesitant to give up the numeric keypad. Yes, I know I can get a separate keypad, maybe even one with mechanical switches, for the relatively rare occasions when one is actually necessary. Yet, I still have this refrain: why would I want to add yet another gadget---attached with yet another cable---to my desk? And why would I add something that I decidedly detached from my main keyboard? And, most annoyingly, why am I adding something that I just decided to remove, but whose presence didn't use to be a problem in the past?!
Well, I still remember those days when keyboards did not have dedicated navigation keys: these were coalesced with the numpad keys, and one would either use numlock (which was off by default) or depress the shift key for quick number crunching. True, that was before the MS Windows convention of marking text using shift-arrow combinations. But aside from that, it worked great.
I actually went ahead and searched for images of the PC/XT and PC/AT layouts (aka 83- and 84-key), and found that it was so much more sensible than the more recent 101/102/103/104 layouts. Most notably, it was economical in terms of space usage, more balanced, and more ergonomic: economical because it did not have a dedicated navigation group; balanced because the function keys were grouped on the left-hand side, countering the numeric keypad on the right, and as a result positioning the alphabetical keys more towards the center; and more ergonomic because of these two reasons, plus the fact that there is no sixth row (escape + F-keys + others) that requires an extended movement range. To me, it's a lot more elegant than what we have today, and sacrifices very little, really.
Searching for a compact mechanical keyboard, all I've found were either the aforementioned tenkeyless layout (sacrificing the numpad); a condensed layout (eg, Adesso MKB-125B) that sort of eliminates the navigational keys but in fact relocates them elsewhere on the keyboard; and a bunch of Cherry models that seem fairly convoluted (and ugly).
What I'd love to discover is a high-quality mechanical keyboard in the spirit of a modern tenkeyless, but one that replaces the navigation key group (3 columns) with a modern numpad layout (4 column). Ideally, it will have the F-keys grouped to the left as in the old XT/AT layout (somehow resolving the escape/backtick conflict), although I admit this is a secondary issue... ;-)
How sensible of a wish is that? Anyone seen such a beast? Or do you think I'm fundamentally wrong?
(Btw, here's a nice survey of the evolution of PC keyboards:
http://www.pcguide.com/ref/kb/layout/stdXT83-c.html )
Thanks for reading through my rants ;-)
G