On Fri, 27 Oct 2017 16:04:16 -0500, Lynn McGuire
wrote:
I use a Northgate Omni Key/102 GOLD at the office. Best keyboard ever
made. I got mine in 1992 ???
I have used a couple of Focus FK-2001 keyboards at the house. The keys
eventually break off them (I pound hard).
Lynn
Wow, sure didn't expect that. Small world, eh
.
I learned my lesson from pounding on the Northgate OmniKey. I was so
ashamed of myself, I took it apart and tried to fix it - resoldering
less-used keys to desoldered keys I'd abusively offended;- a
half-hearted attempt for water already passed under a bridge.
But I have what counts now, the "touch", for the Focus flipping it
over - MODEL: FK 7200 - USB.
That is quite a feat, using an original and dated Northgate, a premier
OnmiKey, especially in an office environment.
The grime and stains on my white Focus keyboard are extraordinary. It
probably would qualify the standard for a world record award the
"Filthiest Keyboard in Existence".
Other than that, FOCUS, shall we say, _should have_ adhered to
engineering precepts when they bought Northgate production materials
and facilities. Unless your model deviated, was redesigned _out_ of
those specifications, to where you can say the Northgate provided
sturdier anchors and/or actual keyswitch-quality procurements. Me, I
really can't tell a difference between this Focus model and my
original OmniKey, not so far as a reasonable and generous allowance
over pressure exerted to engage key tactility;...applying abusive
forces is entirely different, in my experience, to a rugged and
capable capacity the Focus continues to provide, as impeccably built
on Northgate quality.
Might be you're getting "trigger-itch" over multiple lighted (usually
software driver) key schemes, the so-called "gaming" keyboards of
today, across as many as half-a-dozen available grades of
tactile-action switches. Sale prices are good, features options are
wide, and I get it, too.