![]() I don’t know about you, but I use the spacebar a lot more frequently than I backspace, so that placement seems a little unbalanced. The equivalent key on the left hand is backspace. ![]() The only other thing I disliked, as far as key positions go, is that the spacebar is only available to the thumb of the right hand. ![]() The key must be pressed in combination with holding down the keyboard’s foot petal (or while “keypad” mode is active) to produce an Enter rather than a character. Confusingly, it’s also labeled Enter, and there are actually two of them, one below the home row of the right little finger, and the second below that. Mac key labeling isn’t quite perfect, though: the Return key is labeled Enter, which is fine until you find yourself hunting for the Enter key. Windows users are the second class citizens here, having to change the keyboard’s configuration if they want the thumb keys to work optimally. In fact, the keyboard, which is switchable for Mac or PC use, ships configured for Macintosh. One thing I noticed right away is that the keyboard is marked with Command keys (one on each side), and even has Eject and Power keys. ![]() I’m not nuts about silver, but anything’s better than beige. The regular version, priced at $299, comes in white and black. I’m not really sure where the metallic silver color choice came from maybe trying to match the TiBook? Anyway this is the only color the Pro version of the keyboard comes in.
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