Computer Active (UK)

Filco Majestouch-2 Ninja Tenkeyless

Minimal mechanical

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Mechanical keyboards contain traditiona­l switches consisting of a plastic stem, mounted on a spring, that slides vertically within a housing unit. As it reaches the bottom of its stroke, it allows metal leaves – at the side (not the base) of the switch – to make contact and complete a circuit, sending the appropriat­e character to your PC. Not only do these keyboards feel very different from the ‘tile-style’ flat keys now commonly found on both laptops and desktop PCS, they’re also more satisfying to type on than cheaper traditiona­l-style keyboards that use a rubber dome mechanism, which just squishes a contact together. And although they’re pricey, they should last forever.

The Ninja Tenkeyless is a compact version of Filco’s wired Majestouch-2 Ninja keyboard, omitting the numeric keypad (known to aficionado­s as the ‘tenkey’ because it represents the numbers 0-9). The key labels are printed on the fronts, not the tops, so they’ll never distract you or wear off. Underneath are industry-standard Cherry MX switches, in this case the brown variety, which gives you a little bump as the key goes down but no audible click. It all makes for comfortabl­e typing without annoying people in the same room. You can also opt for blue switches if you want more click, or red for a smoother action.

‘N-key rollover’ means you can hit any number of keys at once without your PC missing any. This works when connected to the old-style PS/2 port, but if your PC only has USB you’re limited to six keys, which should be plenty. Rubber pads stop the keyboard slipping around on your desk, and fold-out feet let you adjust its angle.

VERDICT: It looks stylish and for Mac users especially it’s a good drive that – unlike Porsche cars – doesn’t cost the earth

ALTERNATIV­E:

Seagate Backup Plus Ultra Slim 2TB £74 A very similar but even more compact drive with a standard USB 3.0 socket

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