TypeMatrix Keyboards in the News
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SmartComputing Hardware Review
TypeMatrix was recently reviewed by SmartComputing's (www.SmartComputing.com)
Joshua Gulick
(read the full article here)
TypeMatrix 2020 (EZ-Reach) |
CPU rating:  (4 out of 5) |
Ergonomic keyboards alleviate stress in your wrists and fingers by reducing
repetitive motions and changing your typing posture. One hallmark of an
ergonomic keyboard is a split keypad (the keys for your left and right hands
are split apart by about an inch), which helps keep your wrists straight.
Keyboard manufacturers also tweak their boards in other ways (raising the
keypad or changing the height of certain keys, for example), but few dare to
break the golden rule of consumer keyboards: Don't mess with the key layout.
TypeMatrix interpreted the rule to mean: If you're going to change key layout,
make it better and easy to learn.
The TypeMatrix puts a fresh perspective on what makes an ergonomic
keyboard, well, ergonomic. The company made the keyboard small and flat,
arguing that the hills and valleys of an average ergonomic board push the
tension into your arms instead of relieving it. The TypeMatrix's number pad and
arrow keys - two reasons to turn your wrist in a very unergonomic way - are a
part of the keypad, extending as far left as the N key. You can press the
FUNCTION key to access them.
Although the TypeMatrix supports the Dvorak layout (an ergonomic key layout in
which the letters are reconfigured), the default key layout is similar to
the standard QWERTY layout. The letter keys stand in the same QWERTY format
as on most keyboards. The difference is that while keys on the average board
are offset (the rows are staggered, a holdover from typewriters), the TypeMatrix's
keys line up perfectly with each other, forming an eerie grid that makes the
flat keyboard look flatter. The layout reduces the distance your fingers
travel while typing.
TypeMatrix also moved some of the peripheral keys, such as the BACKSPACE and
ENTER keys, to the middle of the keyboard, shifting some of the stress from
your little finger to your forefinger.
Set aside a few hours for practice, download the free tutorial software, and
glance through the to-the-point instructions. You'll adjust to the relief in
your wrists and fingers as fast as you adjust to the keyboard.
by Joshua Gulick
(SmartComputing.com)
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