SteelSeries 6GV2 Keyboard
SteelSeries’ 6GV2 keyboard may be no-frills on the features, but it’s pure bling inside with 18-karat gold-played switches, unlimited ant-ghosting, and 10x the lifespan of regular keyboards.
SteelSeries’ 6GV2 keyboard may be no-frills on the features, but it’s pure bling inside with 18-karat gold-played switches, unlimited ant-ghosting, and 10x the lifespan of regular keyboards.
Logitech’s Wireless Desktop MK710 is in it for the long haul: the keyboard and mouse combo have a three-year battery life and connect via the included 2.4 GHz Unifying receiver.
Microsoft’s SideWinder X4 ain’t afraid of no ghosts: the keyboard’s anti-ghosting tech lets you press 26 keys at once and features macro recording, backlighting, and mod and profile switching.
Starcraft II: WoL isn’t out yet, but get a Dragoon leg-up on hot keys with SteelSeries’ Limited Edition Keyset; it includes 3 layers of customizable macros for Terran, Zerg, and Protoss.
Mad Catz goes mature with their new Eclipse Collection; it mixes upmarket metal finishes and minimalist design with touch-sensitive technology on their keyboards and mice.
Designed to reduce the spread of disease, the Keystick Keyboard concept envisions a personal full-size keyboard for everyone that folds up like a hand-held fan for portability.
Designed for folks who live, breathe, and sleep Gmail, the Gboard is similar to a USB numeric keypad but features 19 commonly used shortcuts including stars, trash, ESC, and archive.
Logitech’s G110 gaming keyboard improves on the G11 in nearly every area: it boasts a slimmer base, a more efficient key layout, backlit red and blue LED keys and a USB hub port.
They look like regular keys, but these CTRL and SHIFT Key Lamps are ginormous; available in white or yellow, they use an LED and are intuitive: press down to turn them on/off.
Made for portability, Microsoft’s Mobile Keyboard 6000 is just a few mm thicker than an AAA battery at the rear, requires Bluetooth, and can be purchased with a separate number pad.
An external version of the popular laptop keyboard, Lenovo’s ThinkPad USB Keyboard was crowdsourced via their design blog; users happily ditched the touchpad, numpad and wireless.
Alienware dives into gaming accessories with its own private label TactX Keyboard and Mouse; both sport customizable lighting, user profiles and buttons, albeit at a premium price.
Logitech’s MK700 Wireless Desktop sounds more like a bed than a keyboard, with concave keys that cradle fingers, a cushioned palm rest and sculpted mouse with 128-bit encryption.
We’re for efficiency, and Logitech’s tiny Unifying Receiver delivers it six-fold: it’s a 2.4 GHz wireless receiver that’ll connect with up to half a dozen mice, keyboards and other wireless devices.
iKey’s AK-39 keyboard is for real military use and meets MIL-461 standards; features include EM shielding, FSR pointing device and green LED backlighting with night vision abilities.
Made for gamers and professionals, OCZ’s Sabre Keyboard has nine OLED keys which can be programmed with images or text; 128 MB onboard memory stores app-specific macros.
Targeted towards media centers, Brando’s wireless Entertainment Slim Keyboard includes a multi-touchpad that doubles as a numeric keypad; it also includes 18 media hotkeys.
You’re not playing with yourself, you’re just playing Tetris: these funky DIY keyboard pants by Zach Hoeken are actually only half functional but definitely put the quirky in QWERTY.
Fresh from Brando, this Tiny Trackball Keyboard isn’t the first compact wireless keyboard we’ve seen, but it still manages to be somewhat pocketable with a trackball and 29 hotkeys.
Nearly half a decade in the making, Phantom’s Lapboard is finally shipping February 20th; Gizmodo already has a review up: pricey and awkward, but it fits comfortable in your lap.
Straight from the shipyards of Q’onos, this Klingon Keyboard is a standard 105 key with a PS/2 connection (USB is for Federation wussies); just don’t spill any gagh on it, you p’tahk!
Logitech’s G13 keyboard was just the vanguard for their G-series gaming products, which include a 7.1 surround sound headset, keyboard with LCD and 5000 DPI laser mouse.
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