"C:\Program Files (x86)\SynWrite\Syn.exe" "t.txt" "t1.txt" "t2.txt"
Pretty sure these are MX Browns with lasered POM caps
Yes, probably... I just didn't want anyone getting ticked at me if they turned out to be rubbies.
Too bad they are ISO-style Enter, and I hope that most of the clear tops are still there, just because.
It's funny, isn't it, how G80s are split between ISO and ANSI Enter keys? The former aren't actually ISO boards, of course, so you'd assume they did that to make the layout more compact. But then why did Cherry use ANSI Enters on so many of their other compact POS boards?
I thought that the leading "L" meant "lasered" and the trailing "US" meant US (ie ANSI) layout. Obviously, I am not a Cherry guy, but was I wrong?
Keep in mind that Cherry's a German company, so some of their designations may be based on German words.
I've often wondered about all this. Does
G80 just mean a board with MX switches? It seems like such an oddly specific designation, considering what a
large number of dissimilar G80-* boards Cherry marketed. Were MXs introduced in 1980? Maybe the
G stands for a German word related to "switch"? (As far as I know, "switch" in that sense is "schalter".) It's interesting trying to unravel these things.