mdlbear: blue fractal bear with text "since 2002" (Default)

Bad week. Continuing the trend set last week, the filk community lost Lindy Laurant. Meanwhile what used to be a free country continues its descent into theocratic dictatorship with kleptocracy. Colleen's nausea and diarrhea also continued, though somewhat improved over the previous two weeks. The USB connector on my old Thinkpad keyboard died while I was in the process of moving the cable to its replacement. Poor little Cygnus suffered a tea spill, so I ordered a replacement keyboard.

It's a good thing that I keep spare laptops in the house. (I'm always happy to take unwanted computers off your hands.) It's a good thing that I don't actually need Bluetooth to work on Sable.

The week to come isn't likely to be any better.

Notes & links, as usual )

mdlbear: (technonerdmonster)

For some time now I've been eyeing Lenovo's ThinkPad Compact Bluetooth Keyboard with TrackPoint with a mixture of gadget lust and skepticism -- most of the reviews I saw said that the Bluetooth connection had a tendency to be laggy. Combined with the amount of trouble I've been having with Bluetooth on Linux Mint lately, and the lack of a USB connection, and the high price, it's been pretty far down on my list of things to buy.

Anyone who knows my fondness for addiction to Thinkpad keyboards can figure out what was going to happen when Lenovo came out with the ThinkPad TrackPoint Keyboard II, featuring both Bluetooth and a wireless USB dongle, but otherwise looking almost exactly like my wired KU-1255 keyboard and the keyboards on most of my Thinkpad laptops. I discussed that in "The Curmudgeon Contemplates Keyboards", a couple of weeks ago.

It arrived yesterday, much sooner than I'd expected. It's lovely, and just about what I expected. It's hard to go wrong with a Thinkpad keyboard.

Being nearly icon-blind it took me a while to puzzle out the switches, because the quick-start sheet had nothing but a few pictures to explain them. It didn't say anything at all about the "Android/Windows" switch. So I went looking on their tech support website and found nothing but a PDF of the quick-start. Not helpful. (After a day and a half I found a review that explained that it gives F9-F12 Android-specific functions, and indeed I was eventually able to make out the tiny markings above them on the beveled edge of the bezel.)

The website -- and most of the reviews -- also mentioned its support for "6-point entry for the visually impaired", but DDG and Google found nothing except references to this keyboard. Braille, maybe? Whatever. There's nothing about it on the tech-support site.

There are some things I really appreciate as a cat's minion. It's exactly the right size to sit on top of my laptop (Sable is a Thinkpad X230; the keyboards are almost identical) with the lid closed and an external monitor plugged in. If a cat shows signs of wanting to sit on it, I can set it aside (or close the lid), and pick it up later. (I broke the micro-USB connector on one of my wired Thinkpad keyboards, because I often flip it up behind the laptop with the keys away from me -- and the cat.) If a cat does sit on it, the on-off switch is easily reachable on the right-hand side. Much easier than unplugging the cable.

So let's sum up. On the positive side: the wireless USB, Bluetooth, the classic ThinkPad feel and layout, the TrackPoint nub, and two of the three buttons are exactly as I would expect. (The middle button is in the same plane as the two side buttons, and the raised dots are much lower and are no longer blue.) The charging connector is USB-C. I haven't used it long enough to evaluate battery life, but it's been on since yesterday and claims to be at 99%; Lenovo claims two months, so that's believable. It's just the right size to sit on an ultrabook like a Thinkpad X230 with the lid closed.

I'm not sure whether to count the low-contrast markings on the function keys as positive or negative. I've pretty-much abandoned my old emacs key-bindings for them, and some of the functions indicated by the icons are actually useful. I'll get out my label-maker, or label them with white-out.

On the negative side: the USB cable is just for charging. For goodness' sake, how much circuitry would it have taken for it to make that a third connection mode? The documentation is sketchy -- the QuickStart page is nothing but icons and arrows, and for an icon-impaired curmudgeon that's a bit of a problem. Nowhere in the documentation does it explain what the Android/Windows switch is for. There's nothing on Lenovo's tech support website, either. There's no backlight, and the function keys are labeled with low-contrast tiny letters. The dongle is, of course, incompatible with Logitech's, so it uses another USB port. (This is a minor quibble, because I had the slot I unplugged the old keyboard from.)

Some people would make the position of the Fn key, to the left of Ctrl, as a problem. They might also complain about the Page Up and Page Down keys' flanking the Up-Arrow in the inverted T arrangement. Since I've be using Thinkpads since sometime in the last Millennium, and the new page-up/page-down positions for 95% of the last decade, I don't have a problem with either of those -- they're exactly what I want. Some people would miss the trackpad and palm rest; I've been using a wired but otherwise identical keyboard for years, and don't miss them. Your mileage may vary.

Another fine post from The Computer Curmudgeon (also at computer-curmudgeon.com).
Donation buttons in profile.

mdlbear: (technonerdmonster)

For the last week or two my external keyboard has been flaking out -- dropping keystrokes, and occasionally barfing out a string of repeats. The cats, of course, know nothing about this. Or will admit to nothing, in any case. So yesterday, after determining that a blast of canned difluoroethane wasn't going to fix it, I finally started to think seriously about replacing it.

The keyboard has only a limited set of plausible replacements, because there are only two types of external keyboard that I can stand: the Model M and the ThinkPad TrackPoint Keyboard. The Model M and the oldest of the Thinkpad keyboards (the marvelous SK-8845 Ultranav) can be dismissed out of hand because they lack a logo key, which I've gotten used to using as Xmonad's Mod key. Most Model Ms lack a trackpoint, although I have one that has it -- and two PS-2 connectors on the cable. Besices, I'm not positive that I can find my Model M at this point, and it takes up a lot of desk space that I don't have anymore.

The second generation of Thinkpad keyboards -- the SK-8855 -- have a logo key, and an attached USB cable that stows into a recess on the back, but have the page-up and page-down keys on the right-hand edge, in what has become, for me, the wrong place. That makes them just enough different from the keyboards on the newer Thinkpads that it's annoying. I have one that I'd consider using anyway, but it's broken; my second one is out on loan.

(You might well ask why, since both of the laptops I'm using -- Sable and Raven -- are Thinkpads with the right keyboard, I would be looking at external keyboards. I blame the cats. If I have an external keyboard and an external monitor on my desk, I can close the lid and let Desti sit on it. Come to think of it, that may be why I need a replacement keyboard in the first place.)

There are three Thinkpad keyboards with the new layout -- the KU-1255, which is what I'm looking to replace, the Bluetooth version, and the shiny new ThinkPad TrackPoint Keyboard II. The Bluetooth version has gotten poor reviews -- apparently it tends to be laggy -- and in any case one of the laptops it needs to go with doesn't have Bluetooth. (I know -- dongles. I'm also running out of USB ports.) The Keyboard II has both Bluetooth and a wireless USB dongle. (It would, of course, be ideal if it were compatible with Logitech's, but of course it wouldn't be.)

I was just about to order one when I saw this line on Lenovo's website:

Ships in more than 5 weeks.

So it looks as though I get to spend $60 on a KU-1255 to use while I'm waiting. Or instead. Or maybe an SK-8855, because they have an attached USB cable instead of requiring a (fragile) micro-USB, except that those appear to be made of unobtainium today. And I can get the KU-1255 from Amazon and have it delivered tomorrow.

Just for the record, here's what I like (and some reviewers detest, of course) about the newer Thinkpad keyboards:

  • Page-up and page-down keys. (Many -- perhaps most -- newer compact keyboards require using the function key on the up and down arrows, which makes it hard to hit one-handed. Because cat.)
  • The cursor keys are all in one place on the lower right: the arrows in an inverted-T arrangement, with the page-up and page-down on either side of the up-arrow in what practically every other keyboard leaves as empty space. Huh?
  • Trackpoint -- the little red pointing stick between the G, H, and B keys. I don't always use it, but it's there when I need it. And you can scroll with it.
  • Along with the trackpoint, there are three buttons directly under the space bar. The middle one is what you hold down to scroll with the trackpoint; on Linux it's also "paste selection" in most places, and "download" in browsers.
  • The classic Thinkpad key-feel. A lot like a Model M clicky-key only silent. Less travel than the mechanical keys on the Model M, but I've come to prefer that.

I'm still waffling over the II. It's hard to justify, now that I have a 1255 on order. But not impossible. Meanwhile I'll just sit here listening to The Typewriter (a concerto for orchestra and solo typewriter) by Leroy Anderson). (There's a version that includes a repeat performance using an IBM Selectric, but I can't seem to find it now. It would have been perfect for this post.)

Another fine post from The Computer Curmudgeon (also at computer-curmudgeon.com).
Donation buttons in profile.

mdlbear: (hacker glider)

Yet another reason, if any were needed, not to like Macs. I pulled out my shiny new Lenovo thinkpad keyboard, which works like a dream. Nice touch, no errors. Trackpoint far enough down so that I don't touch it accidently. Three buttons. I've typed this entire paragraph with no errors due to missed or doubled keys. Perfect.

...but there doesn't seem to be an Apple key. Blerg. At least, if I use it for text, I won't go hitting Apple-W when I want to delete a word and end up deleting the window I was typing into.

There's a Thinkpad in my future, I suspect.

mdlbear: (hacker glider)
MAKE: Blog: Steampunk keyboard mod
I want one. )
Down in its guts it's an IBM model M -- my favorite. [link]
mdlbear: (hacker glider)
EudoraPro[sic] Keyboard, Vintage Clicky-Clacky - Gizmodo [product page] -- it's EnduraPro. Stupid Gizmodo.

I admit it -- I'm addicted to IBM Model M keyboards. It's true that the price on this one is roughly 10 times what I was paying at the local surplus joints back when they still had the Real Thing (I snarfed up most of them), but still -- USB, Windows keys (easily rebound in X), and... black! Now, if only they carried them at Fry's...

Hey, [livejournal.com profile] mr_kurt! Mind if I expense one of these for my work system?

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