Found this while looking for something else:
https://www.ebay.com/itm/Bizarre-Netpliance-I-Opener-keyboard-from-dot-com-bust-with-D-Pad-and-pizza-key/222734418559?hash=item33dc01827f:g:JuEAAOSw9hdZ8q4o"Here is an unusual find and a tacky souvenir from the end of the dot com bubble: a compact PS/2 keyboard with built-in arrow keys, made in China for the first mass-market "Internet appliance": The Netpliance I-Opener. It has a rubber circle (called a D-Pad) in the upper right for the 4 arrow keys.
In 1999, when cheap home PCs were $500 to $700 Netpliance built a somewhat retarded PC for $300, which they soon discounted to $99. They required a $21.95/month subscription for dial-up internet access, and designed their internet terminal first time internet users who didn't want to know about IP addresses, Windows device drivers, cache memory in CPUs, or upgrade options. They partnered with several companies, now mostly forgotten. The one partner we remember is Papa John's Pizza, who was rewarded with a dedicated key on the keyboard. All a subscriber had to do was press the Pizza key to connect to Papa John's website and place an order for delivery.
What we also remember about Netpliance is that in 2000 a hacker from Indiana noticed that the innards of the I-Opener were similar to a standard PC, and that it could easily be hardware hacked to run Linux or WIndows and avoid using Netpliance as your internet service provider. Netpliance thought they could thwart hardware hacking by securing their BIOS chip into the socket with epoxy, and then by releasing a more restrictive BIOS. However, the company went belly-up in 2002.
Netpliance 6511-N keyboards are usually available on eBay, but they rarely sell, since the sellers assume that the internet is full of wealthy tacky-tech collectors who value the novelty of the "Pizza key" at 3 or 4 times the monthly income of a farmer in Burkina Faso. The I-Opener was born to be cheap, so I'm keeping its keyboard that way."