jealous that newegg sells keyboards? no, not lately.
nosh nosh nosh. yummy troll.
nosh nosh nosh. yummy troll.
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So popular it's used at firing ranges.
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don't you people feel bad that others are spending that much coin on such an "inferior" keyboard when the same amount of money can buy a much better mechanical keyboard? and every new keyboard purchase will mean a lost sale for a superior mechanical keyboard.
Any pics? I'd like like to see a paint splattered G15.
don't you people feel bad that others are spending that much coin on such an "inferior" keyboard when the same amount of money can buy a much better mechanical keyboard? and every new keyboard purchase will mean a lost sale for a superior mechanical keyboard.
don't you people feel bad that others are spending that much coin on such an "inferior" keyboard when the same amount of money can buy a much better mechanical keyboard? and every new keyboard purchase will mean a lost sale for a superior mechanical keyboard.
don't you people feel bad that others are spending that much coin on such an "inferior" keyboard when the same amount of money can buy a much better mechanical keyboard? and every new keyboard purchase will mean a lost sale for a superior mechanical keyboard.
don't you people feel bad that others are spending that much coin on such an "inferior" keyboard when the same amount of money can buy a much better mechanical keyboard? and every new keyboard purchase will mean a lost sale for a superior mechanical keyboard.
Funny thing is that on my terminal keyboard, hulking behemoth that it is, I've had W, shift, A, E, Ctrl, SetUp (far left bottom key) and sometimes Q all pressed at the same time without the slightest sign of an issue (Garry's Mod, try it some time).
Meet the answer to your problem, gamers: '80s terminal keyboards!
I could see them charging, say, $50 USD for a "good gaming keyboard" - rubber dome of course, all the bells and whistles, maybe even a G15-style LCD. That would be something like the "cream of the crop" for (traditional) rubber dome keyboards.
Then you'd have your mid range in the 20-35 dollar range, low range being below 20.
That would be way more reasonable for rubber dome boards.
I just hate that keyboard manufacturers are too cheap to buy a $1 worth of diodes and use doubleshot keys.
Certainly, from the manufacturer's perspective, why the hell would they EVER lower the price?
- it isn't the product we hate, it is how the manufacturers consider them good enough to apply a premium price to them
(at least that's what I hate - I don't care if crappy products exist so long as they aren't passed off as anything better than crappy)
Cherry is no longer making 2-shot keys btw, I just spoke with them directly. They are doing Laser if someone wants high quality caps because the cost of producing H key caps became too high. What's already out there is all there will be.
Must be for the consumer market only. They still do make double shot keycaps if requested on OEM orders. I sent them a letter last week and they confirmed that double shot keys are still available on request, however only in black.
High end keyboards should have:
If black : double-shot keys
If white/grey : dye-sublimated/lasered keys
Or, at least they should be made of a durable plastic.
Swap your PS/2 port driver (if running Win2k/XP) and the repeat thing goes away. It does of course cause the keys NOT to repeat but I've found this, for some reason, doesn't affect Source engine games and those are the only ones I play...so I haven't witnessed problems. It seems the Source engine only cares about make and break codes, and considers a key to be "still pressed" as long as the break code hasn't been received yet.
Also speaking for Source games, I found my remaps do work in them. I had mapped a couple keys on the left F block to volume controls and one of the top block is Esc - these work in game. I had mapped the keys on the lower top row as F1-F12 and the ones in the row above as F13 and up...unfortunately you can't bind keys to "F17" for example in the game console, it just doesn't recognize such a key is real.
I don't have to be in the target market to speak for fairness for all consumers.
Certainly, from the manufacturer's perspective, why the hell would they EVER lower the price?
However, manufacturers of rubber dome keyboards are our "enemies" - it isn't the product we hate, it is how the manufacturers consider them good enough to apply a premium price to them (at least that's what I hate - I don't care if crappy products exist so long as they aren't passed off as anything better than crappy). Doesn't make a whole lot of sense to make arguments in favour of "the enemy".