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Lenovo Tinkers With Larger Delete and Escape Keys

Slatterz writes "After a year's research, Lenovo boffins have decided the time is right to install larger Delete and Escape keys on their updated ThinkPad laptop T400s range. While it is a small change, it is fairly radical to tinker with an area of hardware which has been largely unchanged since the 19th century. What convinced them to make the size-change was doing some tests on users to see which keys they use the most. They found that on average, people used the Escape and Delete keys 700 times per week, yet those were the only non-letter keys that Lenovo hasn't made any bigger." The article says Caps Lock may be next on the agenda; death is too good for Caps Lock.

7 of 586 comments (clear)

  1. Caps lock will be the end of unintended shouting by Vandil+X · · Score: 5, Insightful

    and, more importantly, reduce calls during your off hours because a user locked out his/her account due to CAPS LOCK being on when entering a password.

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    Up, Up, Down, Down, Left, Right, Left, Right, B, A, START
  2. Location, location, location by neapolitan · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I am happy to see some thought go in to "routine" matters like this -- too often I feel that laptop keyboards have abominable designs, such as shrunken space bars and control keys, miniscule arrow keys, or nonstandard placement of arrow keys, etc.

    However, I would say the esc enlargement on my Lenovo is unneeded -- its location above the other keys means it is struck accurately. I would venture to say the same for the delete key, which I could locate with my eyes closed by its characteristic placement. I think the aesthetics of the vertical extension of these keys is going to be negative.

    For my money, I wish they would just lay off the IBM keyboard design. Thinkpads should not have a Windows key. :)

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    Slashdotter, ID #101. UIDs are in binary, right?
  3. Re:Caps lock will be the end of unintended shoutin by corsec67 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Yep, the key to the left of "A" should be Ctrl. That is one think about the OLPC XO-1 keyboard I like. The actual keys are crap, though.

    They had laptops or typewriters with function and modifier keys in the 19th century?

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    If I have nothing to hide, don't search me
  4. Re:HERE'S AN IDEA by countertrolling · · Score: 5, Insightful

    HP/Compaqs are probably the worst computers on the market today. I don't know why anybody would buy one. Horrible quality control and service, no XP drivers for any of the newer units...UGH! Lenovos are probably my favorites if for no other reason than the mouse "track point" nub thingy and they're still easily available with XP. I hope they tinker with smaller price tags some day.

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    For justice, we must go to Don Corleone
  5. Marketing Gimmicks & Flawed Analyses by xixax · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So let me get this straight.

    The best way to improve keying accuracy is to create even more derivative keyboard layouts?

    I'd guess the del key might even afford to be *smaller* as it is used more often and hence more easily remembered.

    I would have had a bit more sympathy if the article had said they'd placed it in a more accessible location ala space bar (rather than off to one side of the main keymap).

    Maybe they could create a "Lenovo" key to sit between the "Windows" key and a new "Dave was here!" key. Then I can loan them my 16 button hexdecimal mouse[1].

    Xix.
    [1] Otherwise known as a digitizing puck

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    "Everything is adjustable, provided you have the right tools"
  6. Re:Lenovo aren't the only ones by DirePickle · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Oh, man. There is nothing I hate worse than typing on than one of those Logitech keyboards that shuffle that whole block around. I can never find the home or end keys!

  7. Re:Caps Lock Idea... by dizee · · Score: 5, Insightful

    i'm a senior software developer at a LAMP shop; i write a lot of SQL for ad-hoc queries and what-not. i capitalize SQL queries, even in my ad-hoc queries (it's a good habit to get into if only for readability), but i don't ever use the caps lock key. it is more efficient for me to hold down the shift key (which is closer to my pinky than the caps lock key) while continuing to type at the same pace than it is to stop and press and release the caps lock key. i suspect this is likely the case with most people who are able to type at any reasonable pace.

    so, your example fails to convince.

    the only reason i can see for keeping the caps lock key is for old and/or braindead systems that don't speak anything but uppercase.