Pretty much everyone
has heard of crowd funding these days and the two most popular crowd
funding sites, Kickstarter and Indiegogo are full of projects
searching for funds. While there have been some well known successes (and, indeed, failures), it must be said that in any crowd funding project, it
is a case of buyer beware – indeed, pledger beware as you are not
handing over money for an item, merely the promise of said item.
With that said, my
eye was caught by the Knewkey Rymek keyboard. This is a
USB/bluetooth keyboard in the style of a traditional typewriter. With
internal lighting and a tablet supporting bar at the back, it was
the look of it that made me consider backing the project. So I did,
pledging about £95 (roughly about that dependent upon the dollar
exchange rate back then) for the early bird offer.
After several months
and quite a few updates from the project manufacturer (which is
always good - I have seen a few projects where the communication from
the developer/builder/etc has been non-existent), the keyboard duly
arrived along with a wrist rest and a set of Windows key caps (Mac
was the default set up – I saw what they did there, sneaky
buggers).
Packaging first and
the box, along with the protective sleeve, are of good quality and give
a good first impression. The keyboard itself is rather weighty, that
being the battery for wire free use. You can also use a direct USB cable
link. It looks good even though the keys themselves are plastic. It
would be fantastic if they were metal but the extra cost and weight
would have been prohibitive. There is a support bar for tablets and
other devices up to 9 inches or so in screen size, the rotary dial acts as
a volume control and the carriage return bar is used to select which
of the three Bluetooth devices you can simultaneously connect to the
keyboard.
Looks shiny... |
Good quality too... |
And well packaged. |
I purchased the
model using Cherry MX blue switches and in use, these provide plenty
of feedback and a nice, gentle clack with each key press. If I have a complaint, it's that the space bar is a little too clacky but that's more a gentle niggle than a complaint. Some
ergonomic folks will complain that the typewriter design will play
havoc with people’s wrists but the supplied wrist rest does a very
good job of preventing too much strain. Truly, the Rymek looks and
feels the part. The only thing I cannot comment upon is the battery
life as so far, I have only used it attached to my desktop PC. I will
add here though that the manual recommends a full battery charge even
if you are just going to use the keyboard as a desktop replacement
and I have to agree with that. The keyboard was not picked up at all
via USB until the battery had had a good three hours hooked up to a
charger. The keys are backlit and can provide some funky disco effects if needed, as well as providing some decent illumination of the keys themselves. Another small blessing is the instruction manual, in that it is written rather well and much better than some Chinese translated materials.
Keyboard, wrist rest, key cap remover, key caps, brush, cloth and instructions |
So far, for just
over a ton (including import duty and fees), I think I have done
rather well. Would I try any future crowd funding projects? Maybe,
depending on the cost and what the project was trying to achieve. I
have seen more than a few gaming and technology projects fall over as
the development team has either ran out of money or the project was
never a genuine item in the first place. This, of course, is less of
an issue with Kickstarter than Indiegogo as the former has better
submission and protection policies but as with any crowd funding
request, it is your money you are risking and there is no promise of
a finished product for delivery. As has been the case for centuries,
if it sounds too good to be true, it most likely is too good to be
true. In this instance though, I am one very happy keyboard owner.
The lighting is rather effective |
As set up, it's rather neat and tidy. |
If this takes your fancy, head over to https://www.knewkey.com/ and follow the link to Indiegogo. Just beware that the early bird prices no longer apply and the current price is $179, rather more than what I paid during the funding campaign.
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