I have two mouses, one to the left of my keyboard,
One to the right,
It is.to some people, having the keyboard be EXACTLY right is worth it. Though many of us find less expensive ones that we like.
I switch when hand tired.Never heard of this one before. What are you needing two mice for, except your machine is used by another person, and one is left handed, the other right handed, and if not, are you using them simultaneously (for a computer game, you're operating a robot arm while steering through 3D space?)?
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For this reason I switched to the ANSI layout, in some cases the ISO variant does simply not exists...A keyboard manufacturer could get more profit if it had more space and compatibility to offer different internationalizations. In ISO -boards there are not as much to choose from.
There's no way they design something that convoluted without it being intentionalI have talked to them, and was unable to get them to understand why I have a security problem with a keyboard that issues secret commands I don’t know about.
I do not know about open-source keyboard firmware. You have given me something interesting to research tonight. Thank you!There's no way they design something that convoluted without it being intentional
I had a CORSAIR keyboard for years but disliked iCUE software just for a rainbow RGB light pattern (started 200MB V2, 400MB and GPU-eating V3, and V4+ may as well be a whole OS). OpenRGB was lighter and worked Windows and Linux.
I don't think I'd buy a RGB keyboard without QML or open-source firmware! Turns out keyboards can have RGB profiles on them(no need for on-OS software sending light patterns over USB)
The Greywood V3 switches in Hi75 are quiet and I'm used to it (sounds like typing on clouds on bottom-out; can hear it few secs this vid), but I subtly type faster hearing loud clicksLogitech MX Mechanical Tactile Quiet (Brown switches) is also a good keyboard.