▲ | nottorp 3 days ago | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
> don't waste space on a desk That has always baffled me. If you're using a computer professionally you have at least two monitors... and even one is as wide as a full sized keyboard or wider. Not to mention that TKLs tend to also squeeze the arrow keys and the other navigation keys. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
▲ | mindslight 3 days ago | parent | next [-] | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
The rest of the desk is for things and papers being worked on. Or more realistically, piles of "do this real soon". But to me the real point of a TKL (87%) is to avoid having a dead space between your right typing hand and the rodent. If I were the type of person who wanted a numpad, I'd get a separate one and either put it to the right of the rodent, or to the left of the main keyboard. But what I really want is more macro/F-keys. I use them to switch between desktops/windows, and 12 is just not enough. But I don't know if I've even seen a modern keyboard with even one extra row, never mind just stacking several more rows up top. I'm finally going to try doing something about this. I've got a few of those cheap 4x6 keypads coming, as well as a 75% ortholinear (which is really just a fancy name for a 5x15 keypad, at least the one I'm getting with all 1u keys). I'm thinking the 4x6 keypads up top, and then maybe the 75% turned 90 degrees to the lefthand side of the main keyboard, for one continuous macropad surface? We'll see. (FWIW I don't rely on the "home row" to touch type, so YMMV) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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▲ | frostburg 3 days ago | parent | prev [-] | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
You're probably thinking of a 75%, which is a questionable layout, yes. A typical TKL keyboard is spaced like a fullsize, just without the numpad cluster. Smaller layouts (even 40%) have their advantages in minimizing how much you have to move your hands and fingers but there are tradeoffs (and a learning curve due to the necessary layers in the smallest ones). |