It's pretty clever marketing actually. PC gamers are a very diverse group of people from all walks of life that don't always understand how commonplace their hobby really is these days. Some of them might feel lost or disassociated as a result. A company named this way might be an excellent way to give them a sense of uniqueness in much the same way outrageous fashion choices make someone feel special even though it often just moves them from one categorical classification to another in the minds of outside observers.
I grabbed this keyboard on Massdrop with the thought of getting back into gaming. I was looking for something with Gateron reds, but reviews suggested that others in my position found the browns to be perfectly fine for gaming, which is an opinion I agree with 100%. The review states that the Gateron Browns are a direct clone of the MX ones, but I think the bump is much closer to the top of the key travel, and the "linearness" of the Gateron Browns is more than satisfactory for gaming.
This keyboard "replaces" my Code Green, which is not great for gaming in my experience. I break the Code out when I have a lot of typing to do, but this keyboard is perfectly acceptable for day-to-day messaging and Facebooking and such. I didn't really realize how heavy Greens are until I started using Browns; I'm wondering if the Browns might actually be better for RSI. We'll see.
My one complaint is the way the Winlock switch works. The key is dark when the Windows key is active, and light when it's disabled, and I REALLY WISH it was the other way around. So far I have not found any combination of function keys that changes that behavior. There is a mode that lets you choose which keys are lit up (defaulting to WASD and the arrow keys) but it does not affect the behavior of the Windows key light.
That being said, every other keyboard I looked at does something similar (or is deficient in some other, worse way). The Code is the only mechanical keyboard that I know of whose layout and behavior are exactly as I want them, but they don't make one with Gateron Reds, so what can you do?
IMHO, best for RSI is lubed mx red or gateron red, it is lighter and less resistance (tactile).
Also change into more ergo shape like mistel barocco or ergodox etc. These 60% ish shape are more suited for typing (not moving your hand to mouse) and full keyboard and mouse combo don't give you good typing posture/
I originally wanted Gateron reds, like I said, for gaming over everything else, but these Browns are perfectly fine. I don't even feel the bump unless I go slowly and deliberately feel for it. I got this figuring I could get some replacement switches if necessary, but I don't feel the need
Replaceable switches are a cool concept. If a switch goes bad or gets dirty on most boards, you have to desolder it and solder on a new one. Most people can't do that. This also gives people the option to use unusual switch types, like clears or greens that no one seems to want to make boards out of. It's to bad that they're contact pads and not sockets though.
Also, how many simultaneous key presses is this? 6 or full NKRO?
I'm still not a big fan of illuminated desktop keyboards, but moving the marking so both characters were side by side on the top and well illuminated looks a lot better than what I've seen on other recent ones where the bottom symbol was a steady clear/white color that clashed with the rest of the keys.
These copy/paste keyboard articles are getting incredibly repetitive. Can you at least try out some effort in not copying your words verbatim from the last 10 keyboard articles?? Maybe the companies sending you this stuff for review will start to pick up on your lazy tactics. Until then, I refuse to click on another keyboard article, or even consider purchasing one of these things.
"Final Words I always try to use every keyboard that we review as my personal keyboard for at least a week. My typical weekly usage includes a lot of typing (about 100-150 pages), a few hours of gaming and some casual usage, such as internet browsing and messaging."
The purpose of doing so is to lay out the subjective aspects of our keyboard testing methodology. But I do see your point. It's not going to go away entirely, but maybe we can do something a bit different...
Would anyone care to help me understand the advantages of this latest trend in tall mechanical keys with lengthy travel for gamers as opposed to the shorter chicklet keys? I know a lot of folks loathe chicklet keys with the heat of a thousand burning suns, but they're not going back to the Compaq keyboards of yore with keys so high they cast a farking shadow.
I'm a former medical transcriptionist who was paid to type as fast and accurately as possible without ever looking down at the keyboard. When medical transcription started in the late 1980s, the keys were taller than the Empire State Building and required the strength of Godzilla to mash them quickly and accurately. I've long since moved on to tech support of hospital servers and MT workstations, but am baffled by what is, to me anyway, a new trend for sky-high keys and lengthy key travel.
Please for to explain this phenomena of towering keys. What are the gains? Is it just a trend that shall fade or is it here to stay?
The full-height keys enable the use of a larger switch with a longer travel and smoother action than the silicone rubber domes necessary for the small chiclet keys. The alleged advantage is that the keystroke resistance is even through the entire travel instead of all the force being at the beginning and then the finger "falling through" to the bottom when the dome collapses, so you aren't pounding fingertips against a hard surface all the time because of it.
Personally, most silicone dome switches just feel terrible to me. Some are better than others, though they all feel kinda mushy after using a microswitched board for some time.
I hadn't noticed chiclet keys ever becoming the standard for standalone keyboards. They tend to only show up where space is at a premium and there isn't room for full-height keys.
But everything old is new again. We came out of another "make the keyboard cheaper" trend and are in a "make the keyboard good" phase. There is no elimination of the low-profile boards, but the market IS focusing on full-size microswitched boards lately.
Chiclet/short keys suck IMO - our work desktops from HP come with very flat keyboards and short travel and it was the very first thing I changed out. I find them super annoying when I type on them at other users desks. Tall keys just need a decent wrist rest for me to use comfortably but of course YMMV
Is there any silent mechanical board out there? I have a Corsair (hate the key spacing, too narrow causing mistypes) and even with o-rings it clacks more than I like.
@IceHawk: Check this out for silent mechanical keyboards. I cannot vouch for the veracity of their claims, but it seems worth a look. They've included audio clips comparing their keyboard decibels to the louder mechanical decibels. http://matias.ca/quietpro/pc/
At $150 for what's otherwise a no-frills design that's a really high price. Depending on what the R&D for the new switch cost it might be justifiable from a financial perspective. Not something I'd even thing about buying sight unseen though. I wonder if they'd be willing to send a review sample?
"Chiclet/short keys suck IMO " I didn't wanna be the one to say it, but... yeah. Super-short throw and as an added bonus, I use the raised key edges for tracking my location on the board and they tend to have flat keytops, leading to a lot of looking at the board.
I do find it funny how we've ridden the ramp of increasingly cheaper keyboards for so long. Early home computers had flat membranes and rubber calculator keys(Atari 400, TI 99/4, Sinclair's garbage), and then backed off of that approach for full-throw microswitches even on cheap machines like the C64... and we've steadily slid back from that high standard. We finally hit the point where completely flat keyboards were an available option again right as the market started to swing back towards microswitches.
The height of the mechanicals is slightly misleading, since the switches actually activate a couple mm(2mm for Cherry brand) into the switch travel. Once you feel the bump of the switch(assuming it's a tactile switch and not linear), you can release and move to the next key.
Lord of the Bored brought up some good points too. Not bashing your fingers on the dome's bottom-out is nice.
"Not bashing your fingers on the dome's bottom-out is nice."
That's really not a problem if you're not heavy-handed about typing. I know a lot of people get into their games and really smash the keys as they experience a variety of emotional responses they have trouble controlling, but in those situations it's better to learn how to pay attention to and manage your emotions (or at the very least, exit the situation causing them until things get under control) than it is to buy equipment to compensate for that lack. After all, despite the "no bottom out" being espoused as an advantage, the vast majority of people will still depress the keys to their full length of travel and do the same things to their fingers they would on a rubber dome keyboard. At least with rubber domes, much of that shock is absorbed by the bumper-like soft cap under the key which minimizes shock and helps greatly with finger health versus an undampened mechanical switch.
For me, the issue was still the switch design. Rubber domes literally don't activate until they bottom out, contacting the PCB and completing the circuit. So no matter how calm someone's typing it's necessary to have an impact.
On the other hand, the Cherrys activate 2mm into a 5mm travel distance, so it's really easy for me to float around without ever hitting bottom. Especially with MX Clears, there's no way I can miss the tactile bump on those suckers.
That just seems like such a rarity. I've watched people play video games before and they get pretty intense with the button bashing (moreso the guys since they tend to experience more intense emotions and are a lot more competitive when playing). Even typing is usually a "press down all the way" sort of thing. I think it's really wired into human minds to force the key down. Without a layer of rubber down there to soak up shock, the finger joints ultimately absorb all of that impact which really takes the wind from the sails of the different activation point argument. As durability is already a questionable benefit in the cost vs longevity argument when the mechanical costs +$100 and the membrane board retails for $15, there's just so little left to hang onto for vendors and their customers to hang onto in order to justify the costs.
Anyway...since I've spent pretty much my entire working life tapping away at keyboards because of IT jobs, writing novels, and playing computer games, I've gone through a few keyboard designs to try to sort out inevitable joint issues (moreso in the past few years since arthritis and repetitive strain injuries are really catching up with me for all those decades of abuse) and I've been most comfortable with short travel distance membrane keyboards. In particular, the keyboards on the past few Dell Latitudes I've used (e6420 - e6440 and other non-ultrabook e-series notebooks in the Sandy Bridge to Haswell generations) are the most comfortable keyboards I've put my fingers on. Most desktop keyboards with membranes are pretty good for shock absorbtion, but my knuckle joints and the first finger joint beyond that are really not happy with mechanical keyboard impact at all. In that way, I sort of agree with the argument in the comments box that chiclet keyboards are a really good alternative since there's a lot less joint motion which, as anyone with a replacement knee can tell you, is responsible for wear and tear of things that don't grow back.
I can't imagine what my kids' friends are going to be like when they hit their 40s and 50s. A lot of them bring mechanical boards along with them to LAN parties we host here (big driveway so all their cars fit in it without anyone having to park on the street) and none of them pay attention to how they're typing on those things. It's only a matter of time before doing that catches up with you. I just don't think it's worth trying to justify the higher price of a mechanical keyboard with some of those vendor-invented reasons. If you do find yourself bottoming out keys anyway when you type like most people do, you're going to be doing yourself a huge favor by giving your joints some rubber cushioning even if that amount is minimal.
Yeah, it's definitely human nature to bottom out. Not doing that was something I had to intentionally learn when I grabbed a used mech board.
Keyboards are all so subjective anyhow. Even in the mech niche no one can agree on which switch is easiest to use. Cherry, Topre, Alps, buckling spring, linear, tactile, light springs, heavy springs, tall caps, short caps, plate mount, PCB mount etc... Definitely a first world problem.
This looks suspiciously like the Redragon Vara. They have the same key layout, but different fonts on the keycaps though. The Vara is using the outemu blues I think, which is a heavier feeling Cherry MX Blue clone.
You could resort to key lockouts if worse comes to worse. They're a little plastic clip you install under the keycap that physically blocks the switch from moving. They wouldn't work on keys that you sometimes use, but those tilde and insert keys could be blocked out.
I got a not fully working keyboard and sent it back for replacement, as agreed. Today, a month later, no feedback and the support is ignoring my questions. .... That's very uncool.
I got a not fully working keyboard and sent it back for replacement, as agreed. Today, a month later, no feedback and the support is ignoring my questions. .... That's very uncool.
We’ve updated our terms. By continuing to use the site and/or by logging into your account, you agree to the Site’s updated Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.
37 Comments
Back to Article
kbhakta - Tuesday, November 1, 2016 - link
AnandTech you're go to source for mechanical keyboard reviews. Can't wait to tune in next week, for yet another mechanical keyboard review.dave_the_nerd - Tuesday, November 1, 2016 - link
Did a company really just name itself a sanitized version of r/pcmasterrace/ ?Death666Angel - Tuesday, November 1, 2016 - link
This was started by Yahtzee, not Reddit users.Lord of the Bored - Wednesday, November 2, 2016 - link
That can't be right. Reddit invents everything.dsumanik - Thursday, November 3, 2016 - link
Lol @ kbhaktaIKR ... mechanical keyboard reviews pumped out 3 times a week, but months for major industry wide announcements
On a side note the amount of food crumbs, pubes and pizza grease that will creep underneath this keyboard's keys is truly frightening!
BrokenCrayons - Tuesday, November 1, 2016 - link
It's pretty clever marketing actually. PC gamers are a very diverse group of people from all walks of life that don't always understand how commonplace their hobby really is these days. Some of them might feel lost or disassociated as a result. A company named this way might be an excellent way to give them a sense of uniqueness in much the same way outrageous fashion choices make someone feel special even though it often just moves them from one categorical classification to another in the minds of outside observers.Old_Fogie_Late_Bloomer - Tuesday, November 1, 2016 - link
I grabbed this keyboard on Massdrop with the thought of getting back into gaming. I was looking for something with Gateron reds, but reviews suggested that others in my position found the browns to be perfectly fine for gaming, which is an opinion I agree with 100%. The review states that the Gateron Browns are a direct clone of the MX ones, but I think the bump is much closer to the top of the key travel, and the "linearness" of the Gateron Browns is more than satisfactory for gaming.This keyboard "replaces" my Code Green, which is not great for gaming in my experience. I break the Code out when I have a lot of typing to do, but this keyboard is perfectly acceptable for day-to-day messaging and Facebooking and such. I didn't really realize how heavy Greens are until I started using Browns; I'm wondering if the Browns might actually be better for RSI. We'll see.
My one complaint is the way the Winlock switch works. The key is dark when the Windows key is active, and light when it's disabled, and I REALLY WISH it was the other way around. So far I have not found any combination of function keys that changes that behavior. There is a mode that lets you choose which keys are lit up (defaulting to WASD and the arrow keys) but it does not affect the behavior of the Windows key light.
That being said, every other keyboard I looked at does something similar (or is deficient in some other, worse way). The Code is the only mechanical keyboard that I know of whose layout and behavior are exactly as I want them, but they don't make one with Gateron Reds, so what can you do?
WorldWithoutMadness - Tuesday, November 1, 2016 - link
IMHO, best for RSI is lubed mx red or gateron red, it is lighter and less resistance (tactile).Also change into more ergo shape like mistel barocco or ergodox etc. These 60% ish shape are more suited for typing (not moving your hand to mouse) and full keyboard and mouse combo don't give you good typing posture/
Old_Fogie_Late_Bloomer - Friday, November 4, 2016 - link
I originally wanted Gateron reds, like I said, for gaming over everything else, but these Browns are perfectly fine. I don't even feel the bump unless I go slowly and deliberately feel for it. I got this figuring I could get some replacement switches if necessary, but I don't feel the needBrokenCrayons - Tuesday, November 1, 2016 - link
Bwa ha ha! It wouldn't be funny if it wasn't true.jeffbui - Tuesday, November 1, 2016 - link
Best first comment, could not write betterMr Perfect - Tuesday, November 1, 2016 - link
Replaceable switches are a cool concept. If a switch goes bad or gets dirty on most boards, you have to desolder it and solder on a new one. Most people can't do that. This also gives people the option to use unusual switch types, like clears or greens that no one seems to want to make boards out of. It's to bad that they're contact pads and not sockets though.Also, how many simultaneous key presses is this? 6 or full NKRO?
warrenk81 - Tuesday, November 1, 2016 - link
Did i miss the page where you demonstrated the headline feature? or was it just the two pictures?Ryan Smith - Tuesday, November 1, 2016 - link
Just the two pictures.DanNeely - Tuesday, November 1, 2016 - link
I'm still not a big fan of illuminated desktop keyboards, but moving the marking so both characters were side by side on the top and well illuminated looks a lot better than what I've seen on other recent ones where the bottom symbol was a steady clear/white color that clashed with the rest of the keys.mtbiker731 - Tuesday, November 1, 2016 - link
These copy/paste keyboard articles are getting incredibly repetitive. Can you at least try out some effort in not copying your words verbatim from the last 10 keyboard articles?? Maybe the companies sending you this stuff for review will start to pick up on your lazy tactics. Until then, I refuse to click on another keyboard article, or even consider purchasing one of these things."Final Words
I always try to use every keyboard that we review as my personal keyboard for at least a week. My typical weekly usage includes a lot of typing (about 100-150 pages), a few hours of gaming and some casual usage, such as internet browsing and messaging."
Where have I read that before...
Ryan Smith - Wednesday, November 2, 2016 - link
The purpose of doing so is to lay out the subjective aspects of our keyboard testing methodology. But I do see your point. It's not going to go away entirely, but maybe we can do something a bit different...Manch - Wednesday, November 2, 2016 - link
Could you just do a keyboard round up instead of a separate article?FUBARette - Wednesday, November 2, 2016 - link
Would anyone care to help me understand the advantages of this latest trend in tall mechanical keys with lengthy travel for gamers as opposed to the shorter chicklet keys? I know a lot of folks loathe chicklet keys with the heat of a thousand burning suns, but they're not going back to the Compaq keyboards of yore with keys so high they cast a farking shadow.I'm a former medical transcriptionist who was paid to type as fast and accurately as possible without ever looking down at the keyboard. When medical transcription started in the late 1980s, the keys were taller than the Empire State Building and required the strength of Godzilla to mash them quickly and accurately. I've long since moved on to tech support of hospital servers and MT workstations, but am baffled by what is, to me anyway, a new trend for sky-high keys and lengthy key travel.
Please for to explain this phenomena of towering keys. What are the gains? Is it just a trend that shall fade or is it here to stay?
Lord of the Bored - Wednesday, November 2, 2016 - link
The full-height keys enable the use of a larger switch with a longer travel and smoother action than the silicone rubber domes necessary for the small chiclet keys.The alleged advantage is that the keystroke resistance is even through the entire travel instead of all the force being at the beginning and then the finger "falling through" to the bottom when the dome collapses, so you aren't pounding fingertips against a hard surface all the time because of it.
Personally, most silicone dome switches just feel terrible to me. Some are better than others, though they all feel kinda mushy after using a microswitched board for some time.
I hadn't noticed chiclet keys ever becoming the standard for standalone keyboards. They tend to only show up where space is at a premium and there isn't room for full-height keys.
But everything old is new again. We came out of another "make the keyboard cheaper" trend and are in a "make the keyboard good" phase. There is no elimination of the low-profile boards, but the market IS focusing on full-size microswitched boards lately.
Icehawk - Wednesday, November 2, 2016 - link
Chiclet/short keys suck IMO - our work desktops from HP come with very flat keyboards and short travel and it was the very first thing I changed out. I find them super annoying when I type on them at other users desks. Tall keys just need a decent wrist rest for me to use comfortably but of course YMMVIs there any silent mechanical board out there? I have a Corsair (hate the key spacing, too narrow causing mistypes) and even with o-rings it clacks more than I like.
FUBARette - Wednesday, November 2, 2016 - link
@IceHawk: Check this out for silent mechanical keyboards. I cannot vouch for the veracity of their claims, but it seems worth a look. They've included audio clips comparing their keyboard decibels to the louder mechanical decibels. http://matias.ca/quietpro/pc/DanNeely - Wednesday, November 2, 2016 - link
At $150 for what's otherwise a no-frills design that's a really high price. Depending on what the R&D for the new switch cost it might be justifiable from a financial perspective. Not something I'd even thing about buying sight unseen though. I wonder if they'd be willing to send a review sample?Lord of the Bored - Thursday, November 3, 2016 - link
"Chiclet/short keys suck IMO " I didn't wanna be the one to say it, but... yeah.Super-short throw and as an added bonus, I use the raised key edges for tracking my location on the board and they tend to have flat keytops, leading to a lot of looking at the board.
I do find it funny how we've ridden the ramp of increasingly cheaper keyboards for so long. Early home computers had flat membranes and rubber calculator keys(Atari 400, TI 99/4, Sinclair's garbage), and then backed off of that approach for full-throw microswitches even on cheap machines like the C64... and we've steadily slid back from that high standard.
We finally hit the point where completely flat keyboards were an available option again right as the market started to swing back towards microswitches.
Mr Perfect - Wednesday, November 2, 2016 - link
The height of the mechanicals is slightly misleading, since the switches actually activate a couple mm(2mm for Cherry brand) into the switch travel. Once you feel the bump of the switch(assuming it's a tactile switch and not linear), you can release and move to the next key.Lord of the Bored brought up some good points too. Not bashing your fingers on the dome's bottom-out is nice.
BrokenCrayons - Thursday, November 3, 2016 - link
"Not bashing your fingers on the dome's bottom-out is nice."That's really not a problem if you're not heavy-handed about typing. I know a lot of people get into their games and really smash the keys as they experience a variety of emotional responses they have trouble controlling, but in those situations it's better to learn how to pay attention to and manage your emotions (or at the very least, exit the situation causing them until things get under control) than it is to buy equipment to compensate for that lack. After all, despite the "no bottom out" being espoused as an advantage, the vast majority of people will still depress the keys to their full length of travel and do the same things to their fingers they would on a rubber dome keyboard. At least with rubber domes, much of that shock is absorbed by the bumper-like soft cap under the key which minimizes shock and helps greatly with finger health versus an undampened mechanical switch.
Mr Perfect - Thursday, November 3, 2016 - link
For me, the issue was still the switch design. Rubber domes literally don't activate until they bottom out, contacting the PCB and completing the circuit. So no matter how calm someone's typing it's necessary to have an impact.On the other hand, the Cherrys activate 2mm into a 5mm travel distance, so it's really easy for me to float around without ever hitting bottom. Especially with MX Clears, there's no way I can miss the tactile bump on those suckers.
YMMV
BrokenCrayons - Thursday, November 3, 2016 - link
That just seems like such a rarity. I've watched people play video games before and they get pretty intense with the button bashing (moreso the guys since they tend to experience more intense emotions and are a lot more competitive when playing). Even typing is usually a "press down all the way" sort of thing. I think it's really wired into human minds to force the key down. Without a layer of rubber down there to soak up shock, the finger joints ultimately absorb all of that impact which really takes the wind from the sails of the different activation point argument. As durability is already a questionable benefit in the cost vs longevity argument when the mechanical costs +$100 and the membrane board retails for $15, there's just so little left to hang onto for vendors and their customers to hang onto in order to justify the costs.Anyway...since I've spent pretty much my entire working life tapping away at keyboards because of IT jobs, writing novels, and playing computer games, I've gone through a few keyboard designs to try to sort out inevitable joint issues (moreso in the past few years since arthritis and repetitive strain injuries are really catching up with me for all those decades of abuse) and I've been most comfortable with short travel distance membrane keyboards. In particular, the keyboards on the past few Dell Latitudes I've used (e6420 - e6440 and other non-ultrabook e-series notebooks in the Sandy Bridge to Haswell generations) are the most comfortable keyboards I've put my fingers on. Most desktop keyboards with membranes are pretty good for shock absorbtion, but my knuckle joints and the first finger joint beyond that are really not happy with mechanical keyboard impact at all. In that way, I sort of agree with the argument in the comments box that chiclet keyboards are a really good alternative since there's a lot less joint motion which, as anyone with a replacement knee can tell you, is responsible for wear and tear of things that don't grow back.
I can't imagine what my kids' friends are going to be like when they hit their 40s and 50s. A lot of them bring mechanical boards along with them to LAN parties we host here (big driveway so all their cars fit in it without anyone having to park on the street) and none of them pay attention to how they're typing on those things. It's only a matter of time before doing that catches up with you. I just don't think it's worth trying to justify the higher price of a mechanical keyboard with some of those vendor-invented reasons. If you do find yourself bottoming out keys anyway when you type like most people do, you're going to be doing yourself a huge favor by giving your joints some rubber cushioning even if that amount is minimal.
Mr Perfect - Friday, November 4, 2016 - link
Yeah, it's definitely human nature to bottom out. Not doing that was something I had to intentionally learn when I grabbed a used mech board.Keyboards are all so subjective anyhow. Even in the mech niche no one can agree on which switch is easiest to use. Cherry, Topre, Alps, buckling spring, linear, tactile, light springs, heavy springs, tall caps, short caps, plate mount, PCB mount etc... Definitely a first world problem.
Sudarshan_SMD - Wednesday, November 2, 2016 - link
This is certainly no the second keyboard in the market with ability to swap switches.One that I know is Teamwolf Zhuque TKL keyboard.
https://www.amazon.com/Teamwolf-Zhuque-Backlit-Mec...
SeleniumGlow - Wednesday, November 2, 2016 - link
This looks suspiciously like the Redragon Vara. They have the same key layout, but different fonts on the keycaps though. The Vara is using the outemu blues I think, which is a heavier feeling Cherry MX Blue clone.Ubercake - Thursday, November 3, 2016 - link
Can someone get me a keyboard that will let me disable both the Windows and the Tilde keys???Ubercake - Thursday, November 3, 2016 - link
Or a "null" switch which will allow me to choose which keys I never use and never want to fire?Ubercake - Thursday, November 3, 2016 - link
During gaming, I never use Windows and Tilde.Any other time, I never use Tilde and Insert.
Mr Perfect - Thursday, November 3, 2016 - link
You could resort to key lockouts if worse comes to worse. They're a little plastic clip you install under the keycap that physically blocks the switch from moving. They wouldn't work on keys that you sometimes use, but those tilde and insert keys could be blocked out.Micke2nd - Saturday, January 13, 2018 - link
I got a not fully working keyboard and sent it back for replacement, as agreed. Today, a month later, no feedback and the support is ignoring my questions. .... That's very uncool.Micke2nd - Saturday, January 13, 2018 - link
I got a not fully working keyboard and sent it back for replacement, as agreed. Today, a month later, no feedback and the support is ignoring my questions. .... That's very uncool.