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Old Japanese keyboard at the Deutsches Museum. Every key has 12 possible characters. Caption from the museum: "The Japanese "alphabet" is a mixture of Chinese ideograms (Kandji) and the Japanese sillabary derived from them (Katakana, or in its cursive form Hiragana). The Roman letters are used in addition, together with the digits 0 to 9. A keyboard with 216 keys, each representing twelve characters, was developed for data input in Japanese. An additional pad of 12 keys selects one of the twelve possible shift states. Altogether, more than 7000 Japanese characters can be entered. A further 26 keys serve for control purposes."
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Am I mad for trying this again? At a time when I'm busier than ever. I gave up previously because I frequently use other peoples computers (a dozen times a day). Two days in, my brain is screaming at me right now, but I think I owe It to my fingers.
I never knew how much I touch typed until I tried this.
This is why the French are not world leaders in computing.
Note the @ where (I believe) American keyboards have the " symbol. I think the # is different on an American keyboard.
The Realforce 87U employs Topre's unique capacitive tactile key switches with 3 levels of pressure sensitivity in an ergonomically distributed layout to provide the most comfortable typing experience available in a standard flat keyboard. elitekeyboards.com
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eugh.... at its largest size, you can really see the state of the keyboards at work.... makes me feel quite queasy, especially as it's not just me that uses it.... *vomit*
Netronics ASCii Keyboard with "FastVid" board in its original heavy gauge metal "Big Blue" case. Supplied as a self-assembly kit for use with the Netronics ELFII (RCA COSMAC 1802) and Netronics Explorer kits c1978. Modded by addition of power & shiftlock LED indicators. I really must replace those clumsy brass bolts with something more discrete.