Reply 20 of 32, by dionb
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VileR wrote on 2023-07-13, 06:19:dionb wrote on 2023-07-12, 20:05:Model F capacitive buckling spring board with modern minimalist 84-key SSK layout, made with the original tooling brought out of retirement.
Is that from https://www.modelfkeyboards.com/? I had no idea that the original Model F tooling was involved.
I was pleased to see that they finally introduced full-sized keyboards earlier this year. Admittedly, I'd love to have this one, but for the fact that it's pre-order with no definite shipping date besides 'later this year'. I've also seen a couple of reports stating that their keyboards didn't come though shipping in the best of states, which makes me a bit wary.
Yep, that's the source. No issues with shipping here, but you have to have patience - and trust that you are actually on the list, as you get zero communications between submitting form and getting that email (in my case over a year later) saying it's your turn and please pay.
Daniël Oosterhuis wrote on 2023-07-13, 12:02:I don't think you'll find many that do, beyond some nostalgia :D Ball mice were just technically inferior, and unlike old mechan […]
doublebuffer wrote on 2023-07-13, 11:45:Nor for the mice for that matter.
I don't think you'll find many that do, beyond some nostalgia 😁
Ball mice were just technically inferior, and unlike old mechanical keyboards, don't exactly provide an experience you'd want to go back to!Well, unlike you like having to clean rubber balls frequently and all the fun that comes from that! 😁
Microsoft Trackball Explorer. Not quite as old as the keyboards here, but in a league of its own in terms of desirability and unfortunately very limited availability. Now if someone were to re-make that I would get very, very happy and order enough to last me until the end of my days. As it is I have six, four of which are in good order, the other two are for parts.
Jo22 wrote on 2023-07-13, 14:29:Weren't there at least two Model F, though? 🤷♂️
My father had the version for the AT (num block, LEDs) which looked different to the Model Fs used on XTs.
Lots more, from the original PC/XT keyboards via AT and a number of specialist models up to the F122 'battleship'. I have one and actually I think its keys feel and sound better than the new model, but my desk simply isn't big enough for that monstrosity 😉
Jo22 wrote on 2023-07-13, 14:50:[...] […]
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Does anybody by any chance know how Cherry keyboards relate to this?
They used to be popular in my place, ca. mid-late 80s to early 90s, but not necessarily because for being cheap.
Some models even looked quite similar to the Model M.
Cherry was (and is) a major manufacturer of decent but unremarkable mechanical switches. Completely different to IBMs buckling spring designs, with modular individual switch units per key. In the 1980s and early 1990s, their black (linear, fairly stiff) switches were popular with typists preferring the blue (clicky and light, very rattly style). Back in the day Alps switches were generally seen as a better implementation of the same idea, but Alps stopped production leaving the field open to Cherry, which - also having the advantage of very easily interchangeable keycaps - became the default standard for mechanical keyboards today.
Note that the switches used are only a small part of keyboard ergonomics; the (in)flexibility of the keycaps, the curvature (or lack thereof) of the board and the sculpting, weight and material of the keycaps are all relevant too. Just take a look at Cherry's own G80-1000 and G80-3000 ranges that ran concurrently for almost a decade. The G80-1000 was a solid, metal-backed design that was obviously inspired by the Model M Enhanced Keyboard, but refined it quite a bit and can be considered progenitor of today's 'standard' keyboards. It was available with all of Cherry's then current switches and keycaps. The G80-3000 was a cheaper all-plastic version that could use the same switches and keycaps. It was - and is (unlike the G80-1000 it's still in production) - a sad, bendy, noisy unpleasant thing to type on.