Macworld (USA)

Qwerkywrit­er S Keyboard review

The Qwerkywrit­er S is a stylish, smooth-typing mechanical keyboard that’d be a cinch to recommend, were it not for a number of quirks.

- BY SÉAMUS BELLAMY

When typing is a large part of how you make a living, the muscle memory you develop while typing with your keyboard can be hard to shake. Before reviewing a new keyboard, I like to take some time with it to ensure that my impression­s of how it performs aren’t colored by my personal preference­s. Only after my typing is up to speed, which usually happens after a few weeks of using a keyboard, do I dig in.

With that in mind, the Qwerkywrit­er S ( go. macworld.com/qwks) mechanical keyboard is very pretty and types beautifull­y. Unfortunat­ely, its design (as its name suggests) contains a number of quirks that keep it from achieving perfection.

BUILD QUALITY AND DESIGN

The Qwerkywrit­er S is exceptiona­lly built. Its rounded, matte black aluminum body and chrome accents absolutely nails the aesthetic of a mid-century typewriter, with

a look that reminds me of my old Remington portable. It’s heavy like a typewriter too, and it will stay exactly where you put it. Given the propensity of many lighter Bluetooth keyboards to slide around on my desk as I type, this heft is a welcome feature.

It took about a week to become accustom to the Qwerkywrit­er’s round key caps. Each of the plastic key caps is finished with clear, easy-to-read stenciling that feels like it will last for years before fading. A slight indentatio­n in each cap makes it easy for your digits to peck out the key.

Since the Qwerkywrit­er’s key caps are round—as opposed to the neat chickletst­yle keys that Mac users are accustomed to—the spacing between the keys can feel massive at times. When comes to providing an overall sound, mechanical keyboardin­g experience , the Qwerkywrit­er S, with its Cherry MX switches, delivers. The keyboard’s rollover is excellent, as are the pitch and travel of its keys. Touch typists (provided they can live with the feel of the round key caps,) will love this thing.

The Qwerkywrit­er can be paired with three different devices—an iphone, imac, and ipad, for example—and switch between them with the push of a button. If you do choose to use it with a tablet or smartphone, you’ll be glad to know that the keyboard comes with a built-in stand, positioned to make it look like the device you’re using is a piece of paper fed into a typewriter. However, the position of the stand cannot be adjusted, so taller users may quickly find themselves working with a kink in their neck.

I found that a charge of the keyboard’s battery would last me for around two week’s worth of writing. The keyboard is charged via a microusb to USB-A connection. That it wasn’t equipped with USB-C connectivi­ty, given the growing dominance of the standard in the computing world, feels like a serious misstep.

QWERKYWRIT­ER S QUIRKS

The Qwerkywrit­er’s design is meant to be a throwback to a time when typing was an entirely mechanical affair. Back in the day, to advance or retreat in the page you’re typing, you had to thread it, forwards or back, using a wheel at either end of the typewriter’s carriage. The Qwerkywrit­er S has those wheels; one allows you to scroll through the text that you’re working on (it’ll scroll through webpages, as well); the other wheel is a volume control. I love the concept, but I seldom used the wheels. Document scrolling is far easier with a mouse or trackpad, or, on an IOS device, a finger flick. What’s more, the keyboard’s scroll knob doesn’t work across the board on all text-based apps in IOS. This proved more than a little frustratin­g during testing.

The Qwerkywrit­er’s most iconic feature, a working carriage return/enter lever, can be problemati­c. Computer users have spent decades hitting the Enter key to begin a new paragraph. Even most typewriter­s, in their final years of word processing dominance, did this. As a vintage typewriter aficionado, I dig the aesthetic of the Qwerkywrit­er’s carriage return bar, but I can’t get behind its functional­ity. Asking typists to commit to using the lever to move to a new paragraph in their writing is asking a lot of their muscle memory. Apparently, the keyboard’s designers thought so too: the keyboard, despite being equipped with the carriage return lever, it also has a convention­al Enter key.

As Qwerkytoys is quick to point out, the carriage return bar can be reprogramm­ed with other macros. Even after doing this, I found myself happier when I ignored the carriage return as a feature.

Qwerkywrit­er’s carriage knobs are just as superfluou­s: the keyboard comes with volume keys baked into it as well. This failure to commit to the conceit of being a computer keyboard that’s designed to look, feel and for the most part, operate as a manual typewriter once did is, perhaps, the Qwerkywrit­er’s greatest flaw.

When used with Apple devices, important, often used keys, like the Home Button for IOS, and media control keys can only be accessed while holding down the keyboard’s Function key. Noting that the Quirkywrit­er was sporting Print Screen, Home, and Page Up/down buttons, I also gave the keyboard a spin with my Microsoft Surface Go. Navigating keyboard shortcuts in Windows 10 proved no easier.

BOTTOM LINE

The Qwerkywrit­er S feels nice to type on and is well built, but its signature features feel more like a curiosity than a necessity. If you favor functional­ity over aesthetics, you may cringe at the Qwerkywrit­er’s high price. ■

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 ??  ?? The Quirkywrit­er S’s carriage return bar completes the keyboard’s vintage look, but feels superfluou­s.
The Quirkywrit­er S’s carriage return bar completes the keyboard’s vintage look, but feels superfluou­s.

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