best Apple item ever...
I use this keyboard exclusively, and I LOVE it to pieces.
Chris
Depends how you look at it. It's a laptop keyboard, so if you switch from a Macbook/Macbook Pro to this keyboard and back, you don't have to get used to the other keyboard much.doc holiday wrote:kinda cool, but it sure is missing a lot of keys
Chris
To be exact; the size of the motion between typing and mousing is not the problem.Machinate wrote:I would say that keyboards without numberpads are, in general use, a LOT more ergonomic than regular keyboards, in that switching from 2-handed typing to mousing+modifier keys (the most normal big action there is) has been shortened from my now deceased logitech 104-key to the apple bluetooth number here by roughly 20 centimeters. The motion is really fluid now.
Ergonomics is concerned with fitting the system / environment / tool 'to the person and task'.
Or as wiki puts it
"Ergonomics is the scientific discipline concerned with designing according to the human needs"
(As a side point here, the only truly ergonomic tool is one which can be adapted eg. a height-adjustable desk.)
Most people experience RSI as a result of mouse-clicking, or typing, which require only tiny movements and no large movement of the whole arm as is the case with moving from a keyboard to a mouse situated past a number pad.
A therapist and ergonomic consultant who was treating my RSI asked me.
"What would be the most 'ergonomic' location for your printer when you are typing facing the screen?"
"In the next room" was the correct answer.
To add to my above post:
If a lot of mousing needs to be done (parameter editing etc), either using a shorter keyboard or simply moving the keyboard slightly to the left (we're talking right-handed mouse operators obviously) has the same effect - allowing the user to operate the mouse at a more neutral position.
If a lot of mousing needs to be done (parameter editing etc), either using a shorter keyboard or simply moving the keyboard slightly to the left (we're talking right-handed mouse operators obviously) has the same effect - allowing the user to operate the mouse at a more neutral position.
I'm not exactly sure what your position is there, but yes, that is what you get with a short keyboard. It's great.misteron wrote:To add to my above post:
If a lot of mousing needs to be done (parameter editing etc), either using a shorter keyboard or simply moving the keyboard slightly to the left (we're talking right-handed mouse operators obviously) has the same effect - allowing the user to operate the mouse at a more neutral position.
Funny, though, I had a tiny bit of recurring RSI, and this was caused by improper seating, which caused the wrist to be slanted oddly.
Yup. To go deeper, posture is basically always the problem that renders small repetitive movements dangerous.Machinate wrote:I had a tiny bit of recurring RSI, and this was caused by improper seating, which caused the wrist to be slanted oddly.
Glad you sound like you're over the RSI, that's good news.
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keyboard slightly right and a trackball!misteron wrote:To add to my above post:
If a lot of mousing needs to be done (parameter editing etc), either using a shorter keyboard or simply moving the keyboard slightly to the left (we're talking right-handed mouse operators obviously) has the same effect - allowing the user to operate the mouse at a more neutral position.
the trackball helps me keep that wrist movement down. I can hardly use a mouse anymore I've been using a ball for so long!