I Type Holes in Keyboard Covers – This One Survived

9 pointsposted 3 days ago
by monkeymagick

15 Comments

RomanPushkin

an hour ago

Keyboard covers are pretty popular in dry, dusty areas. Like cities like New Delhi, Cairo, etc. A good rule of thumb: if you go outside and can easily spot dust on tree leaves, you'll probably want a keyboard cover.

Groxx

an hour ago

I really can't stand the typing-feel of covers. Any of them.

I would MUCH rather buy and use a cheap external keyboard that can be trivially disassembled to clean. Plus then you get to sit back further, and not look down at the screen as much. Win/win as far as I can tell.

JohnFen

3 days ago

Regular people use keyboard covers?? I don't think I've ever seen that. I have only seen them on machines that are ruggedized for harsh environments or keyboards that are in public areas for public use.

monkeymagick

3 days ago

Ruggedized for harsh environments? looks at my messy desk Yup.

hjkl0

2 hours ago

> I have only seen them on machines that are ruggedized for harsh environment

FWIW, you can also see them used for switching to DVORAK and other alternative layouts.

And for adding a second writing script to a keyboard with Latin-only labels.

_thisdot

an hour ago

Using a keyboard cover when learning a new layout is a bad idea in my experience. Better to have a layout map printed out next to your monitor. The idea is to look at the keyboard as little as possible

ktallett

an hour ago

It is annoying mac don't sell Dvorak or Neo2 layouts now.

_thisdot

an hour ago

It really is not. The people who need to look at keyboards are typing in QWERTY anyway. And the people who type in alternative layouts aren't looking at their keyboards. The few keys that you need to look at (function keys up at the top maybe), don't really change positions between layouts.

Arainach

an hour ago

You are dramatically underestimating the cost of manufacturing, stocking, and distributing an entirely different SKU and probably also dramatically overestimating the number of users of alternative keyboard layouts in the world.

Put another way: I am absolutely certain that more users would get a Mac with a Dvorak layout by mistake and want to return it than would actually purchase and keep one.

Groxx

an hour ago

Given how many other laptop vendors do this and don't charge extra for it, I think you might be over-estimating it somewhat.

Plus Apple already does this for 20(+?) languages, some of which have difference shapes, which for a macbook means different frame milling. One more letter arrangement isn't much.

_thisdot

26 minutes ago

Which other manufacturers offer this? I went looking for Dell, HP, and Lenovo laptops with Dvorak and couldn't find any. Even Framework or System76 doesn't have one in offer. The separate keyboard sold by System76 doesn't offer it in Dvorak or Colemak. It's difficult to even find MX profile keycaps for any alternative layouts in my experience.

Plus we're overestimating the number of users of alternative keyboard users in the world. There's maybe a few hundred thousands of us. Compared to the millions of speakers these 20+ languages have.

BigJono

an hour ago

Plus most people that use Dvorak probably don't give a shit at this point because they've been touch typing on qwerty or blank keyboards for their whole life. I'm not sure it'd even be a selling point for me.

ktallett

an hour ago

I always thought keyboard covers on macs were not realistic unless removed everytime as there is not enough of a gap between screen and keyboard. However, I found on macs the keys get damaged very easily from oils, far more so than other laptops. I see the need for one, but it does damage the typing experience somewhat.

justinc8687

an hour ago

I've found the screen cover to be almost essential. I had 2 MacBooks where the screen was ruined by somehow making contact with whatever on the keys. Not sure how it's possible but the first thing I do now after buying a MacBook is put a glass screen cover over it.