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vandr0iy
9
May 25, 2018
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Unless you're a hipster or have >100wpm typing speed - you don't care about all the stuff written above. At least, that's my experience.
I'm afraid I'm in the hipster category, because I soldered up my own ergodox from the very first kit being sold here and now use it everywhere as my daily driver as I'm approaching the >100wpm club. This is the only actual reason I appreciate the mech keyboards, if I could do that with regular rubber domes for half the price I'd not hesitate for a moment.
tl;dr: mech keyboards are a meme money-eating hobby: they offer little benefit to the regular folks compared to their price, but nevertheless they feel nice once you type on one.
Nice article though.
May 25, 2018
ChuckDee
1906
May 30, 2018
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vandr0iyThe programmability and usability are very important if you spend the majority of your day typing, and I think that's what a lot of it is based on. And you don't have to get a high typing speed nor be a hipster to appreciate something that makes your workday more comfortable. I have no where near 100 WPM (only at about 60-70) but type continuously as a writer and a programmer, and having my keys laid out so that I have all of the keys where I need them, and minimize the number of useless keys has made me more productive.
May 30, 2018
Mounds
61
Jul 6, 2018
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ChuckDeeToo true, comfort is key when anywhere from 8 to 14 hours a day could be spent hammering away on a keyboard. Plus, once macros come into play, stock keyboards just fall completely short of offering any good means of programmability. Vortex/iKBC has done their best to try and make that approachable but meh, QMK controls are more more appealing.
Jul 6, 2018
BlueCrowned
5305
Jul 21, 2018
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vandr0iyI just find it interesting, I am not a hipster. lol
Jul 21, 2018
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