Hello there,
I just got myself a Unicomp keyboard (the ``resurrected'' IBM model M).
When I first typed on this keyboard, I suddenly realised that the tactile
feeling was exactly what I experienced 20 years ago on my 386 machine.
However, as I can recall, the keyboard with my 386 was a Taiwan-based keyboard.
(It had ChangJei and Dayi radicals printed on keys, a small backspace key
and a horizontally-rotated-L-shaped enter key).
Could somebody please help me to clarify whether buckling-spring based keyboards
have ever been produced in Taiwan? Thanks so much!
--
I just got myself a Unicomp keyboard (the ``resurrected'' IBM model M).
When I first typed on this keyboard, I suddenly realised that the tactile
feeling was exactly what I experienced 20 years ago on my 386 machine.
However, as I can recall, the keyboard with my 386 was a Taiwan-based keyboard.
(It had ChangJei and Dayi radicals printed on keys, a small backspace key
and a horizontally-rotated-L-shaped enter key).
Could somebody please help me to clarify whether buckling-spring based keyboards
have ever been produced in Taiwan? Thanks so much!
--
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