It's been zero days since my blue switch mechanical keyboard significantly disrupted a meeting at work.
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It's been zero days since my blue switch mechanical keyboard significantly disrupted a meeting at work.
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Monospace Mentorreplied to Scott Williams π§ on last edited by
@vwbusguy Do you actually take it to meetings, or are they just in the same building?
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aburka π«£replied to Scott Williams π§ on last edited by
@vwbusguy is that not why you have it?
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Scott Williams π§replied to Monospace Mentor on last edited by
@monospace The microphone picked it up over a conference call.
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Scott Williams π§replied to aburka π«£ on last edited by
@aburka I prefer tactile switches because I enjoy them more and generally type faster and more confidently with them vs linear quiet ones. Part of it I'm sure is an age thing, since I learned on old mechanical keyboards and used manual typewriters and there's a sort of auditory cued rhythm that comes with it, least you jam up the typewriter, that has never left me.
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Brandon Conwayreplied to Scott Williams π§ on last edited by
@vwbusguy I have a few IMB Model Mβs and Cherry MX Blue Keyboards in the garage now as backups/retired keyboards, but my main keyboards now are Cherry MX Browns or similar. Reason being is I got tired of spouse and co-workers complaining about the noise. I havenβt missed the Blues with the Browns like I thought I would.
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Scott Williams π§replied to Brandon Conway on last edited by [email protected]
@bcon At home, I have a Das Keyboard 6 Professional with blue switches and because the keys are more deeply set in a bigger chassis, the noise is better contained than the Logitech blue switch one I have in the office.