![]() ![]() The riser is removable - it clips on with magnets - if you prefer a regular incline. ![]() While I would have preferred it to have been a bit steeper - it keeps the heft of the unit down, so it's slim enough to fit in a normal laptop bag. ![]() It's relatively slim - about the width of a MacBook Pro. They keys don't have a lot of travel - it's more like a laptop that a traditional keyboard - but it's responsive and light. The split and rise of the unit is a delight. It's close to perfect! I'm comparing this to my venerable Microsoft 4000 keyboard. Let's start with how the keyboard is to type on. So, time to try the inelegantly named " Sculpt Ergonomic Desktop" - a wireless keyboard with separate number-pad and mouse. It's far to big and bulky for a laptop bag - and life's too short to type on a non-ergonomic keyboard. It's a chunky-monkey that's really only suitable for leaving in a fixed location. It has some drawbacks, sure, no USB ports, weird function keys, no backlight - but the real problem with it is its heft. it's one of the best pieces of hardware developed by Redmond. ![]()
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