On Dec 11, 11:54 pm, RayLopez99 <raylope...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Dec 10, 11:22 pm, Flasherly <Flashe...@live.com> wrote:
>
> > aggravated playtime usage, online, in some distant virtual setting
> > withal for the gamer to purvey.
>
> That's interesting--but you can summarize what you said in plainer
> English and maybe recommend a keyboard maker? You mentioned OMNIKEY
> and DELL which I think were cited favorably.
>
> Backlit keyboards--that would be an annoyance to me.
>
> RL
I just happen to have a OMNIKEY, which simply came rebadged for a
NORTHGATE with DELL computers. I bought mine sometime later, after
the NORTHGATE period, at the hefty price then of $100US dollars. I
also over time broke it whilst writing English, amongst other uses,
trials and tribunes, nevertheless I do believe I still have it, around
about on the shelves of Obsolete Items, located somewhere. Then, once
having broken naturally did **** me -- I bought a FOCUS FK 7200/USB
(made in China);- an understanding being, to me, is the FOCUS brand is
at some point "carrying" the OMNIKEY moniker, though somewhat lighter
and whatnot, for an extant or residual resemblance to the OMNIKEY at
least remaining. The above-mentioned are the only two keyboards I've
personally used.
Not to worry, though, (as luck would have it), the OMNIKEY has been
resurrected in all its glorious fame and reputation (how shall we say,
for commiserate pricing), as a prised and genuine artifact of computer
history. ...without further ado
http://www.ergonomicsmadeeasy.com/st...prime-keyboard
(I might also suspect ties to Northgate and Omnikey within an IBM
keyboard design framework.)
A past for moving along, forward into semi-practicality to enter the
Gaming Arena of modern keyboards, not your dad's. All aside, mightn't
one think a keyboard would really matter to a vaster populace of
hordes mushing merrily along with squishy little rubber-booted, $10US
interpolators;- hence a niche marketing for computer seriousness
connotative of having evolved into gaming via mechanical keyboard
switches. . .
{filtering, as follows. . . }
Home >
Computer Hardware >
Input Devices >
Keyboards (x) >
Price : $200 - $300 (x) >
Text Search Terms: mechanical keyboard (x)
(1-4 of 4 Results)
{linked, ibid. . .}
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...S&Pagesize=100
Cherry(tm) switches being the highest priced exception for specialised
input to include hostile environs;- pretty much a "gaming concept"
priced below, although I'm sure any number, besides, the $100US
Rosewill I first mentioned for $50 of Black Friday, would blow my
FOCUS out the water.