I am using an old-fashioned Lexmark $150 keyboard with really good tactile feedback).

Another good keyboard (my personal favorite) is one you would probably hate -- the Gateway AnyKey keyboard.

If by tactile feedback you mean a physical or audible click when a key is depressed, then you won't like the AnyKey. It is a very soft touch keyboard, like typing on velvet, and is quiet. What I really like about it (and this is so essential to my work that I have haunted ebay for years and stockpiled a half dozen keyboards because they are no longer being manufactured) is that it is fully programmable - you can install macros into just about any key on the keyboard. Gateway has told me that I am the only person to ever complain that I could only store 1024 keystrokes as macros before running out of keyboard memory. As a conservative estimate, I would guess that I place between 5,000 and 10,000 keystrokes a day using my macros (some of which are in the vicinity of 100 keystrokes long).

tanstaafl.

"There Ain't No Such Thing As A Free Lunch"
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"There Ain't No Such Thing As A Free Lunch"