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posted by martyb on Tuesday January 16 2018, @04:44PM   Printer-friendly
from the shallow-premise dept.

You may not think much about the switches that sit underneath the keycaps of your keyboard, but there's a large contingent of enthusiasts who really, really care. And for those users, Cherry's various MX-branded switches are somewhat of a standard. Because they include a number of mechanical parts, though, you won't see a lot of laptop-like thin mechanical keyboards or mechanical keyboards on more than a handful of laptops.

The trend, however, is clearly going toward slim keyboards — and that's not lost on Cherry. So at CES this week, the company is introducing a completely new line of keyboard switches that may just be small enough to bring mechanical keyboards to more laptops (or at least more niche gaming laptops) and thinner keyboards. These new switches are low-profile versions of the Cherry MX RGB switch, a switch that features colored LEDs and which is especially popular with gamers. The company tells me that, if successful, it'll launch thinner versions of its other MX switches, too.

Source: https://techcrunch.com/2018/01/12/cherrys-new-low-profile-switches-may-help-bring-mechanical-keyboards-to-more-laptops/


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  • (Score: 5, Insightful) by bob_super on Tuesday January 16 2018, @05:22PM (2 children)

    by bob_super (1357) on Tuesday January 16 2018, @05:22PM (#623188)

    > Why can't we just have the keyboards that Thinkpads had about 5-10 years ago?

    Because Apple. The slim laptop and copy-Apple crazes killed the good keyboard.

    Still have a small Dell at home with a great real keyboard. Off my cold dead carpal-tunneled hands! (anyone has a spare H key?)

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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday January 16 2018, @10:49PM (1 child)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday January 16 2018, @10:49PM (#623343)

    Because Apple. The slim laptop and copy-Apple crazes killed the good keyboard.

    While I normally go along with a good apple hate, at least in this case it is not at all apple's fault that the "copy-Apple crazes" came into being.

    The real fault here lies with the copy-Apple crazes who decided to copy everything apple did to the most minute detail. If they had not gone "apple mad" we wouldn't have every laptop attempting to look like a low-budget apple laptop.

    • (Score: 2) by Grishnakh on Thursday January 18 2018, @05:08PM

      by Grishnakh (2831) on Thursday January 18 2018, @05:08PM (#624216)

      I don't think bob_super was blaming Apple there, he was just citing them as the initial cause. Truthfully, those stupid island keyboards were first invented and commercially used by Sony years before, but it wasn't until Apple decided to ape them that they really took off. I think it's fairly obvious that the Apple-copiers are really the ones to blame; you can't blame Apple for a bunch of other idiots copying them. But Apple and their design choices are the root cause; if Apple hadn't adopted this design, most likely we wouldn't see island keyboards at all today, or maybe only on Sonys.

      Honestly, I really am sick of other companies copying Apple and their crappy designs and conventions. If I liked Apple that much, I would just buy an Apple product. No one in their right mind buys a Thinkpad wishing it were more like a MacBook; that's like shopping for a full-size Ford truck and wishing it were more like a Nissan Cube.