Of course, you can still experience the clickiness of the Model M without owning one with the great emulator [1]. It's available on Debian and Ubuntu dev-releases:
sudo apt-get install bucklespring
[0] https://blog.opsdisk.com/images/keyboard/preclean.jpgI have both an original model M and a modern one, and my fingers cannot tell the difference.
It's called heat-staking, you should be able to drill them out and replace with suitably-sized screws and nuts.
Distilled water isn't conductive, it's the salts that are.
They're awesome.
To me, not covering shipping on warranty is a tell that their quality is low enough that failed keyboards are common. I don’t think I have ever seen a device have an electronically failed USB port...cables sure but this wasn’t.
Anyway mine was junk and might still be. I wouldn’t recommend Unicomp anymore.
My Model M is used on the gaming PC (Civ, XCOM and the like, not FPS).
For everyday use on the laptop I have a Japanese layout Filco Majestouch Convertible 2 TKL w/Cherry Red switches (45 cN force). I also have the same with Cherry Brown switches (55 cN). Not sure which I like the best at this point. The Model M is 70 cN.
I have a Model F somewhere around here in box. I think I need to find it and clean it up.
[1] https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=keyboard+dishwa...
It broken in a move at some point though. :-(
I am sure many people already know, but just in case-
There is also a dedicated enthusiast who has worked to painstakingly reproduce the model F keyboard, and make them available for sale at https://www.modelfkeyboards.com
If you're looking for a serious keyboard to last you the rest of your life, I highly recommend the F.
I used to use model-ms but they became hard to get, and I gave away far too many of them back at a time when they weren't scarce. (I still have two, but can't replace them at a reasonable price if they fail)
The extra keys on the model-f terminal keyboards are handy too.
There was a window where I worried that my two remaining model-ms were going to have to last me the rest of my life.
Fortunately there are now a lot of mechanical keyboards available at reasonable prices. I like the model-m and model-f keyboards somewhat better, but many other mechanical keyboard choices are pretty good too.
* Restoring a Cherry G80-1000 from the late 1980s (new switches + cleanup): https://blog.nytsoi.net/2018/05/16/restoring-cherry-g80-1000
* Converting an IBM Wheelwriter keyboard (similar to IBM Model M) to USB: https://blog.nytsoi.net/2018/11/28/ibm-wheelwriter-usb-conve...
I've been looking around for a Model F which would really be the crown jewel of my collection, but unfortunately they are very rare and everyone who owns one really knows its value. As for my own use, after I got an Ultimate Hacking Keyboard I have no longer used the Cherry or other keyboards for real work. Getting a split keyboard "ruined" me from others, so they are now just novelty items.
Almost everyone that comes into my office comments on it, some engineers are truly giddy. Funny enough our ultra-high spec engineering workstations have native ps/2 ports, no adapters necessary!
I left it at the office over the pandemic, it's one of the things I miss the most at home .
Original restored ones are the best. Well loved and who ever does the restore has an investment that tends to amplify the good experience.
I need at least Ctrl, Alt and Command to work comfortably, and ideally also have Fn and Super. You can get away with remapping right-side modifiers to do something else, but you can't add a key that isn't physically there — so if the left side of the spacebar does not have at least three modifier keys, the keyboard is not very useful for me…
Also, having gotten used to the UHK (Ultimate Hacking Keyboard), I find that the huge space bar is a waste: I only ever hit the space key with the right thumb, and I'd much rather have an entire row of modifiers than a huge spacebar key, which mostly goes unused.
I had high hopes for an external Apple butterfly keyboard, since it basically fulfills the promise of mechanical keyboards in providing haptical and audible feedback, combined with a shorter key travel. Additionally it would have been socially accepted far more easily than anything mentioned above;)
Since that will not be happening anytime soon, I have to wait 10 years until the virtues of the butterfly mechanism will be rediscovered by a small group of enthusiasts and hackers. :P
A good (and very thorough) wash later and its as good as new. The best (and loudest) keyboard I use. Its best feature is the little ridge to hold your pencil on top of it---why don't more keyboards have one?
It felt more natural to me in that position.
Was easily one of the best little business ventures I had. Was making hundreds to thousands an hour, course there’s limited supply and demand so it wasn’t sustainable.
The only thing I could suggest for improvement is the part when a YouTube ad spoils the flow:
"This tank of a keyboard weighs in at over 6 pounds, sounds like [. . .]"
It would have been nice to just hover and hear the clack clack clack of the ancient beast. But - advertising - sigh.
Here’s the video that inspired me to buy one: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y9Jds326gks
If you want a slightly more in-depth experience, there are hotswap macro pads that will let you change out switches, with keycaps, and actually input things with them.
The only other option is to track down a keyboard meetup, at least that will be an option against post covid.
My first decade and change of typing was on a Model F, from my father's PC-AT. I still have it, although I use an Ergodox now and might never plug it in again. Great piece of hardware, durable like a tank and excellent key feel.