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- WARNING!
-
- TO TOUCH-TYPISTS CONSIDERING "UPGRADING" TO A NORTHGATE OmniKey 102 KEYBOARD!
-
- I, like many of you out there, have one of those mushy keyboards often supplied
- with mail-order clone PCs. It works good enough, but the "feel," or some
- may say "tactile sense" is not really the best (or as good as the IBM I have
- at work).
-
- After reading the multitude of ads for Northgate replacement keyboards, I
- figured "What the hell" and (grimacing slightly) shelled out the $106 bucks.
- It arrived about a week later and I opened it up. Impressed with the packaging
- and nice keyboard cover they included (as well as extra color-coded keys for
- switching the position of the Ctrl and Caps Lock keys), I lustily connected it
- to Old Betsy for a test drive.
-
- At first, I was impressed by the clicks and the overall feel. I soon noticed,
- however, that when I typed the word "application," I saw "applicatino" on the
- screen. I tried it a few more times, and EACH TIME I saw the same Latin-
- sounding word "applicatino." I typed tion tion tion tion and got tino tino
- tino tino... I think you get the idea. Thinking this was a minor bug
- I continued and noticed that "CD\ALPHA4" came out "C\DALYHPA4". Where did
- the "Y" come from? Why the transposition? I returned the keyboard and got
- a new one. The new one does exactly the SAME THING. Applicatino, Applicatino,
- Applicatino. C\D C\D C\D......
-
- My wife tried it and it worked fine. As long as you type one letter at a time,
- LIFTING EACH KEY ENTIRELY before pressing the next one it works fine! But
- if you type as a normal touch-typist would, it seems to hold certain keys in
- its buffer for one stroke and play them back out of sequence.
-
- I followed Northgate's unconcerned tech support guy's advice, to "read the
- manual" and study the dipswitch settings. I already had- I have several years
- experience with hardware setup and following technical manuals. No luck here.
-
- TO SUM UP: You may want to consider avoiding Northgate's OmniKey 102 keyboard IF
- you are a touch typist and/or type in excess of say, 40 WPM. The model with
- the function keys on the left "the way God intended them to be" was the only
- one I tried (both times)- I can't say whether the one with the function keys
- on top has similar design problems.
-
- What a disappointment! If I can save another person the headache, this will
- be worthwhile. I'm interested in your reaction, or even comments from some-
- one associated with Northgate. I understand their equipment is normally
- excellent- maybe they got a "bad batch" of keyboard circuitry or something,
- hard to say...!
-
- -Mark X-
- Milwaukee, WI
-